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BANCROFT 
LIBRARY 


THE  LIBRARY 

OF 

THE  UNIVERSITY 

OF  CALIFORNIA 


Digitized  by  the  Internet^Archive 

i n  2(|b7  vyjth  f u  nd i r|0  fre)m 

IVIicro^oft  Corporation 


littp://www:arcli  ive.org/details/farisliarizonahis00far4rich 


COMBINED  INDEX 


PARISH      I 

ARIZONA 

HISTORY 


Volumes  1  to  8 


Phoenix    ;      :     May  1,  1920 


"  MANUFACTURING  STATIONERS  >«~  MOKNIX,  AIUOMA 


Index  to  Parish  Histories 


This  work,  to  a  degree,  may  serve  as  a  memorial  to  the 
lamented  Thomas  Edwin  Parish,  State  Historian  of  Ari- 
zona from  June  12,  1912,  shortly  after  the  date  of  State- 
hood, till  the  hour  of  his  death,  on  October  29,  1919. 

Within  the  embraced  period,  Mr.  Farish  had  published 
eight  volumes  dealing  with  the  history  of  Arizona.  As  each 
book  was  of  individual  issuance,  to  an  extent  independent 
of  the  others,  and  as  the  material  was  not  presented  in 
chronological  sequence,  naturally  there  was  separate  index- 
ing of  each  volume.  Now,  as  death  has  concluded  the 
labors  of  the  author,  it  appears  clear  that  there  should  be 
made  available  a  full  listing  of  the  contents  of  all  the  vol- 
umes officially  published  by  him. 

Herewith,  therefore,  is  presented  a  combined  index  of 
the  Farish  Histories.  There  has  been  no  change  in  the 
plan  of  the  original  indexes,  but  there  has  been  condensa- 
tion. It  w^ll  be  noted  that  under  a  single  heading  now  are 
grouped  all  references  to  any  subject  or  individual  consid- 
ered in  all  the  volumes. 

It  is  hoped  that  iliis  compilation  will  be  found  of  value 
to  the  owners  of  the  publication  and  of  assistance  to  stu- 
dents of  Arizona  history. 

Jas.  H.  McClintock, 

State  Historian. 
Phoenix,  Arizona,  May  10,  1920. 


405L4 


A 

Acoma — v.    1,   Onate    subdues   revolt  of   Indians   31,   destruction 

of  pueblo  46, 
Adams,  C.  S. — v.  8,  in  Wickenburg  massacre  293. 
Adams,  Charles — v.  6,  founder  Adamsville  46,  91. 
Adams,  Chas.  L. — v.  6,  early  farmer  Salt  River  valley  IZ. 
Adams,  John  and  wife — v.  6,  264. 
Adams,  Samuel — v.  3,  defeated  for  Congress  88,  89,  v.  4,  2d  Leg. 

thanks  161,  164. 
Adamsville — v.  6,  settlement,  1st  postmaster,  changed  to  Sanford 

46,  1st  modern  flouring  mill  48. 
Aguativi,  San  Bernardino  de — v.  1,  early  Spanish  mission  55. 
Aguerra,  E. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  139. 
Aguilar — v.  8,  Mex.  outlaw  shot  by  Americans  203. 
Aguirre,  Trinidad — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  146,  165. 
Agustin  de  Santa  Maria — v.  1,  Hopi  mission  55. 
Aiken,  Ben — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  138. 
Ainza — v.  8,  train  attacked  by  Indians  145. 
Ajo  Copper  Mine — v.  1,  worked  by  Ariz.  Trading  &  Mining  Co. 

278-9. 
Alarcon,  Hernando  de — v.   1,  disc.  Colorado  river  19,  returns  to 

New  Spain  21. 
Aldrich,  Mark — v.  1,  1st  Ter.  Treas.  326,  v.  3,  member  1st  Leg. 

89,  v.  4,  elected  to  3d  Leg.  165,  Pres.  Council  184,  settler  on 

San  Pedro  247,  v.  8,  207. 
Alexander — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  128. 
Alexander,  Gen.  A.  J. — v.  5,  conference  with  Del-shay  and  Skivit- 

kill  304,  V.  7,  originates  Indian  schools  238,  v.  8,  scout  against 

Indians  24. 
Alexander,  T.  M.— v.  3,  211. 

Allen,  Maj.  B. — v.  1,  organizer  Ariz.  Mining  &  Trading  Co.  278. 
Allen,  Adj.  Gen.  J.  B. — v.  8,  supplies  to  participants  Camp  Grant 

massacre  159. 
.A^llen,  John  B. — v.  4,  266,  v.  5,  member  4th  Leg.  2,  Ter.  Treas. 

49-50,  57,  v.  6,  pre-empts  Maricopa  Wells  65. 
.A.llyn,  Jos.  P. — v.  2,  early  judge  325,  v.  3,  assigned  to  2d  Judicial 

Dist.  74,   resigns  246,   candidate   for   Del.   to   Congress   246, 

V.  4,  defeated  148. 
Alsap,  John  T.— v.  3,   1st  Treas.   of  Ter.   189,  215,  attacked  by 

Apache   255,    surgeon   Woolsej'^   exped.   274,   v.    2,    bio.    266, 

V.  4,  1st  Ter.  Treas.,  reports  163,  v.  5,  Council  5th  Leg.  ZZ,  34, 

V.  6,  organizer  Phoenix  Ditch  Co.  86,  91,  member  Leg.   124. 

probate  judge  133,  early  lawyer  213,  270-1. 
Alters,  Lew — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 
Altman,  Jno. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 
Ammerman,  John — v.  6,  91. 
Ancient  Ruins — See  ruins,  canals. 
Anderson,  Allen  L. — v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  285. 
Anderson,  James — v.  3,  chief  clerk  House  Rep.  1st  Leg.  94. 
Anderson,  J.  W.— v.  6,  53,  124. 
.\nderson,  John — v.  5,  34. 
Andrada,  Sylvester — v.  6,  53.  *  " 

Andrews,  Geo. — v.  8,  Supt.  Indian  affairs  2. 
Angerstein,  E. — v,  2,  Confed.  Ter.  Treas.  85. 
Anthony,  Alfred — v.  2,  Treas.  Ariz.  Land  &  Mining  Co.  73-4. 
Antonio.   Juan — v.    1,    principal   chief   Pima,   assists   Kearny   and 

Cooke  143. 
Anza,  Juan  B.  de — v.  1,  74. 

1 


Apache — v.  1,  13,  trouble  68,  campaigns  against  69,  friendly 
rancheria  at  Tubac,  destroy  missions  76,  warpatli  78,  killing 
by  Johnson  and  reprisals  117,  trade  with  Kearny  135,  char- 
acteristics, etc.  199,  Boundary  Commission  Survey  experi- 
ences with  210,  218,  227,  Oatman  massacre  by  Ton  to  Apache 
258,  attack  Cremony's  party  272,  attack  on  Tucson  249, 
V,  2,  warpath  30,  massacres  35,  tight  with  Rhodes  53-4,  kill 
lumbermen  at  Canoa  55,  56,  raids  after  withdrawal  of  troops 
56,  light  at  Stein's  Pass  with  Free  Thompson  party  59,  skill 
and  craft  62,  destroy  property  63,  attack  Carleton's  dispatch 
bearers  120,  defeated  by  Ariz,  guards  at  Pinos  Altos  123, 
Cochise  and  Mangas  Coloradas  attack  at  Apache  Pass  126-7, 
Cremony's  descr.  127,  Mangas  Coloradas  shot  by  John  Teal 
133,  capture  and  killing  of  Mangas  Coloradas  143,  raids  151, 
treaty  with  Usher,  Indian  Comr.,  attack  Hayden's  train, 
Gardo,  chief,  killed,  Capt.  Tidball's  exped.  154,  Buttervvorth's 
experience  155,  Mescalero  at  Bosque  Redondo  173,  King 
Woolsey  hangs  chief  217,  Pinole  Treaty  218,  Jeffords  leads 
Howard  to  Cochise,  makes  treaty  and  is  appointed  Indian 
Agt.  230,  killing  of  Rogers  and  Spence  2?)] ,  Esquinay  killed 
by  Nachis  239,  exped.  resulting  in  Camp  Grant  massacre 
269,  killings  281,  v.  3,  Poston's  descr.  159,  v.  4,  only  Indians 
hostile  22,  v.  5,  descr.  by  Emory  and  Johnson  226,  v.  6,  band 
wiped  out  by  resident*  of  Florence  62,  63,  v.  7,  hist.,  legends, 
folk-lore  etc.  3. 

Apache,  Camp — See  Camp  Apache. 

Apache,  Fort — See  Fort  Apache. 

Apache-Mojave — v.  2,  attack  Maricopa  29,  v.  5,  threaten  La  Paz 
308,  V.  7,  war  with  whites  2,  hist.  231,  2,  v.  8,  Date  Creek  Res. 
10,  at  Camp  Verde  10. 

Apache  Pass — v.  2,  battle  127,  1st  use  of  artillery  against  Indians 
137. 

Apache-Yuma — v.  5,  threaten  La  Paz  308,  v.  7,  war  with  whites  2, 
hist.  233. 

Appel,  Nathan  B. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90. 

Aravaipa-Apache — v.  7,  war  with  whites  2,  hist.  5-6  (name  trans- 
lation error,  word  means  "Small  Springs"). 

Archibald,  John  H. — v.  4,  settler  on  San  Pedro  305. 

Ariola— V.  8,  133. 

Aristan,  Miguel — v.  1,  Mex.  Comr.  treaty  Guadalupe  Hidalgo  153. 

Arivaca — v.  1,  early  hist.  11 ,  deserted  after  Pima  revolt,  mines  11 . 

Arizona — v.  1,  name  adopted  322. 

Arizona  City — See  Colorado  City. 

Arizona  Copper  Mining  Co. — v.  2,  72). 

Arizona  Guards — v.  2,  repel  Apache  123 

Arizona  Historical  Society — v.  4,  incorporated  by  1st  Leg.  135, 
abandoned  260. 

Arizona  Historical  &  Pioneer  Society — v.  4,  incorp.  by  Leg.  260. 

Arizona  Land  &  Mining  Co. — v.  2,  7Z. 

Arizona  Miner — v.  3,  early  newspaper  31. 

Arizona  Mining  &  Trading  Co. — v.  1,  formation  278,  explor.  party 
278,  Ajo  Copper  mines  278,  at  Planchas  de  la  Plata  278,  or- 
dered from  country  by  Mex.  279. 

Arizona  Volunteers — v.  4,  organization,  activities  93,  96,  Indian 
fighting  97,  Washburn's  report  98,  end  of  organization  109, 
Hutton's  report  112,  no  pay  116,  Congress  refuses  to  support 
181,  3d  Leg.  192-3,  v.  5,  McCormick  urges  raising  of  regiment 
4.  Mason  recommends  raising  of  companies  190. 

Arizonian — v.  1,  1st  newspaper  in  Ter.  352. 

Arizuma — v.  1,  name  suggested  326. 

2 


Armstrong,  Jack — v.  4,  38. 

Arnold,  S.  G.— v.  2,  Pres.  Ariz  Land  &  Mining  Co.  IZ. 

Arny,    Governor — v.   2,   criticises   West's   report   killing    Alangas 

Coloradas   149. 
Arney,  W.  T.  M.— v.  8,  Indian  Agt.  222. 
Ash  Fork — v.  5  (should  read  Prescott  Junction)  349. 
Ashley,  Albert— v.  4,  304. 
Ashley,    Representative — v.    2,    introduces    bill    for    organization 

Ter.  321. 
Ashurst,  Henry  F.— v.  2,  285. 
Asuncion,  Juan  de  La — v.  1,  supposed  1st  Spaniard  to  enter  Ariz. 

7-8. 
Atchison,  Capt.  Chas. — v.  4,  command  Gal.  Vols,  at  Ft.  Mohave  74. 
Atlantic  and  Pacific  Ry. — ^v.  4,  act  granting  lands  to  aid  199,  200. 
Attorney  General — v.  4,  office  abolished  by  3d  Leg.  185,  v.  5,  Leg. 

Com.  reports   Coles  Bashford  held  office  illegally  19. 
Aubrey,    Felix — v.    1,   94,    names   localities   99,    famous    ride    100, 

explor.  for  wagon  road  353,  death  353. 
Auditor,  Terr. — v.  4,  office  created  by  3d  Leg.  185,  v.  5,  report  14, 

15,  58,  59. 
Austin,  F,  L. — v.  8,  testifies  for  Camp  Grant  Indians  243. 
Aversch,  John — v.  6,  early  farmer  Salt  River  valley  151. 
Ayers.  Cal.— v.  4,  28. 
Azul,  Antonio — v.  4,  Pima  chief,  1st  Lt.  Ariz.  Vols.  96. 

B 

Backus,  Judge  Henry  T. — v.  3,  succeeds  Judge  Howell,  resigns 
246,  V.  4,  charge  to  grand  jury  213,  v.  5,  decides  3d,  4th  and  5th 
Legs,  illegal  98. 

Bailey,  Steve — v.  6,  pioneer  of  Florence  56. 

Bain,  B.  C— v.  6,  87. 

Baker — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Baker — v.  8,  family  killed  by  Indians  Bluewater  station  202. 

Baker,  Elihu— v.  3,  78. 

Baker,  John — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Ball,  S. — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  135. 

Ballon— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  137. 

Balzau.  Chas. — v.  6,  109  (error,  Balzan). 

Bancroft,  H.  H. — v.  7,  origin  of  Hopi  142,  3. 

Bandelier,  A.  F. — v.  7.  mythology,  etc.,  of  Hopi  162. 

Banghart,  Geo.— v.  2.  259,  v.  5,  322. 

Banta,  A.  F. — v.  2,  bio.  240,  v.  3,  with  exped.  in  Ariz,  estab.  post 
at  gold  diggings  31,  93,  v.  6,  275,  v.  8,  disc,  meteoric  crater  31, 
prospecting  trip  33,  induces  Capt.  Barry  to  disobey  orders 
to  massacre  Apache  57,  conditions  in  Ariz.,  the  military, 
etc.,  92. 

Barado — v.  6,  locates  at  Holbrook  291,  refer  to  Berrando  291. 

Barba — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  136. 

Barbe,  Joaquin — v.  8.  killed  by  Joe  Phy  and  Milt  Ward  301. 

Barbour,    Chas.— v.   8,   294. 

Barclay,  W.  J.— v.  8,  296. 

Bark,  Jim — v.  8,  anecdotes  of  C.  E.  Cooley  1^,  77 . 

Barnard.  Geo.  W.— v.  6.  221. 

Barnard,  Col.  F.  P. — v.  8,  fight  with  Apaches  under  Cochise  27. 

Barnes — v.  8,  attacked  by  Indians  138. 

Barnes,   Peter — v.  6,  71. 

Barnett,  Aaron— v.  6.  92.  v.  8,  294. 

Barnett,  U.  C— v.  4.  44,  elected  3d  Leg.  165.  v.  5,  2. 

Barnett  &  Barth — v.  3.  stote  at  Prescott  206. 

Barnett  &  Block— v.  6,  99,  216,  232. 

3 


Barney,  Capt. — v.  2,  with  Kit  Carson  in  exped.  against  Navajo  170. 

Barney,  Jas.  M. — v.  4,  264,  lays  out  road  Florence  to  Salt  river 
266,  V.  8,  investigates  Wickenburg  massacre  306. 

Barnum,  Tom — v.  2,  early  miner  249,  v.  6,  86,  92,  1st  elected 
sheriff  Maricopa  Co.   101. 

Barth,  Sol. — v.  5,  adventure  with  Cochise,  descr.  by  Banta,  Earth's 
own  story  319,  v,  6,  276. 

Bartlett,  John — v.  2,   see   Hank'N'Yank. 

Bartlett,  John  R. — v.  1,  supersedes  J.  C.  Fremont  as  Bound.  Comr. 
183,  succeeded  by  Maj.  W.  J.  Emory  187,  interviews  with 
Indians  212,  v.  4,  Bound.  Comr.,  descr.  Santa  Cruz  valley  6. 

Barranche,  Padre — v.  1,  killed  by  Yuma  74. 

Barrett,  Fort— v.  2,  estab.  by  Cal.  Col.  102. 

Barrett,  Lt. — v.  2,  in  tight  with  Confeds.  at  Picacho,  killed  88,  101, 

Barroche,  J.   R.— v.  6,  213. 

Barry,  Capt.  John — v.  8.  command  exped.  kill  Apache  50,  charges 
of  Col.  Green  57,  Ord's  report  81. 

Bascom.  Lieut. — v.  2.  treatment  of  Cochise  31,  acct.  by  Pumpelly 
33. 

Basconzales,  Don  Joseph  de — v.  1,  6  (error,  1526  should  read 
1726). 

Bashford,  Coles— v.  3,  Pres.  council  1st  Leg.  89,  90,  94,  bio.  90, 
early  lawyer  in  Prescott  213,  245,  early  lawyer  in  Tucson  249, 
V.  4,  elected  2d  Leg.  149,  Del.  to  Congress  164,  incorporator 
Atlantic  &  Pacific  R.  R.  199,  v.  5,  Leg.  Com.  reports  held 
position  Atty.  Gen.  illegally  19,  Del.  in  Congress  introduces 
bill  to  make  Ariz,  collection  dist.  88,  speech  on  approp,  for 
improvement  Colorado  river  Indian  Res.  88,  speech  on 
amendment  to  postal  bill  96. 

Bashford,  Levi— v.  2,  1st  Surv.  Gen.  325,  v.  4,  312,  v.  8,  193. 

Battle  Flat  Fight— v.  4,  136,  7. 

Baty,  Lt. — v.  4,  commands  in  Verde  valley  244. 

Bauerlein,  Julius— v.  6,  179,  214. 

Baylor,  Lt.  Col.  John  R. — v.  2,  Confed.,  assumes  govt.  N.  M,  and 
Ariz.  85.  mistreats  Indians  and  is  demoted  86-7,  raises  troops 
in  Ariz.  97,  scheme  to  recover  Ariz,  and  N.  M.  for  Confed,  97, 

Beach — v.  8,  train  attacked  by  Indians  143,  144. 

Beach,  Chas,  W.— v,  3.  34,  38,  v,  4,  316,  v,  6,  109,  216. 

Beadle,  J.  H. — v.  6,  religion  of  Hopi  159. 

Beale,  Lt.  Edw,  F, — v,  1,  aids  Kearnj'  110,  opens  wagon  road  to 
Cal.  256,  use  of  camels  356. 

Bean,  C.  C— v.  5,  337,  v.  8,  172. 

Bean,  R.  C— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131, 

Bean,  Samuel  C, — v.  1,  1st  Marshal  of  Ter.  326. 

Bear  Pen — v.  3,  name  one  of  1st  houses  in  Prescott  194,  5,  213. 

Beatty,  Jas.  C. — v.  6,  killed  by  Richard  McGregor  235. 

Beaubien,  Chas. — v.  1,  early  judge  in  N.  M.  133. 

Beauchamp,  "J^ck" — v.  4,  28,  v,  8,  killed  by  Indians  127. 

Beauchamp,  J.  W. — v.  3,  estate  1st  to  be  administered  in  probate 
court  Yavapai  county  247,  killed  by  Indians  267. 

Becker,  Gustave— v,  6,  288, 

Becker,  Julius— v.  6,  288, 

Becknell,  Capt. — v,  1,  early  trader  over  Santa  Fe  trail  88, 

Bedel— V,  8,  shot  by  Gandara  203. 

Begole,  Augustus — v.  5,  attacked  by  Indians  311. 

Behan,  John  H.— v.  3,  33,  34.  v.  4,  129, 

Bell— V.  4,  killed  by  Indians  137, 

Bell,  Wm,  A, — v.  5,  member  surv.  exped,  Kans.  &  Pac.  Ry.  102, 
book  "New  Tracks  in  North  America,"  desc.  adventures  102. 

Belnap — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  127. 

4 


Benavides,  Padre  Alonso — v.  7,  translation  of  name  of  Xavajo  36. 
Bendell,   H. — v.  8,   Supt.   Indian  affairs   2,   investigates   Wicken- 

biirg  massacre  306. 
Benedict— V.  2,  215. 
Benedict,   A.    C. — v.   2,    member    Walker   party   243.   v.    3,   4.    12, 

member  Walker  party  27,  29,  30,  death  30. 
Benjamin — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 
Bennett,   Col.   C.   E. — v.   4,    condemns   Ft.    Bowie    122.    campaign 

against  Indians  125. 
Benson,  Capt.  Henry  iVl.^v.  2,  estab.  post  in  Chino  valley  250, 

V.  3,  exped.  into  Ariz.  31,  tight  with  Indians  284,  v.  4,  in  com- 
mand at  Ft.  Whipple  126. 
Bent,  Chas. — v.  1,  1st  American  Gov.  N,  M.  133,  killed  in  native 

revolt  147. 
Bentley,  E.  A. — v.  5,  editor  "Arizona   Miner,"  killed  by  Indians 

316,  v.  8,  129. 
Benton — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  139. 
Benton,  Robt— v.  6,  killed  by  Indians  290. 
Bernard,  Geo.  W. — v.  3,  owner  1st  hotel  in  Prescott  195,  215. 
Bernave,   Padre  Juan   Christostomo   Gil   de — v.    1,    in   charge    ai 

Guevavi  76. 
Berry,  Thomas  N. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132 
Berry,  Wm.  J. — v.  3,  candidate  for  Congress  88,  89,  v.  4,  supervisor 

Yavapai  Co.  157,  v.  6,  purchases  1st  lot  in  Phoenix  102,  164. 
Berthold,  F.— v.  4,  settler  on  San  Pedro  247. 
Bertran,   George — v,  6,  180. 
Bichards  &  Co.— v.  6,  48,  98,  175-6.  217,  8,  9. 
Bidwell,  Thomas  J. — v,  3,  80,  member  1st  Leg.  90,  v.  4,  321,  v.  5. 

speaker  5th  Leg.  34,  v.  6,  member  6th  Leg.  124. 
Biertu,  F. — v.  2,  desc.  of  mines  64. 
Bigelow,  Henry  A. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  89,  v.  4,  member  2d 

Leg.  149,  chief  clerk  house  3d  Leg.  184,  v.  5,  348. 
Big  Bug  Mining  District — v.  1,  298. 
Billingsly,  E. — v.  4,  supervisor  Pah-Ute  county  157. 
Bill  Williams'  Fork — v.  1,  reached  by  Onate  49,  by  Padre  Jacob 

Sedelmair  61. 
Binckley,  Frank — v.  4,  in  Skull  valley  against  Indians  133.  Battle 

Flat  fight  136. 
Birch.  Jas.  E. — v.  2,  estab.  1st  stage  line  1. 

Biresley,  Dr. — v.  8,  post  surgeon  at  Camp  Grant,  acct.  of  condi- 
tion of  victims  massacre   160. 
Birmingham,  Patrick — v.  4,  parish  priest  at  Yuma  293-4. 
Births,  Early— V.  3,  in  Prescott  212,  v.  6,  1st  in  Phoenix  224-5,  264. 
Black  Canyon — v.  2.  explored  by  Ives  23,  by  Johnson  23-4. 
Blackwell,  Jos.— v.  4,  68.  69. 

Blair.  Francis  P.  R.— v.  1,  1st  U.  S.  Atty.  in  N.  M.  133. 
Blair,    Geo.— v.   4,    129. 
Blake,  Colonel— v.  1,  288. 
Blake.  Chas.  M. — v.  4,  Chaplain  3d  Leg.  184.  resolution  of  thanks 

193. 
Blakenay,  Major  Thomas  J- — v.  3.  in  Woolsey's  report  265. 
Blanchard,  J.  C. — v.  8.  ranch  destroyed  by  Indians  141,  killed  by 

Indians   148. 
Blanding.  Wm.— v.  1.  278. 
lUasser.  Geo.— v.  2,  242. 
Block.    Benjamin — v.   6,    92. 

Bloomfield — v.  1,  Henry  Wickenburg's  partner  298. 
Blowe — V.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  142. 

Blue  Water — v.  8,  Baker  and  family  murdered  by  Mex.  202. 
Boblett,  Ed.  A. — v.  4.  member  1st  party  in  Verde  valley  215. 


Bogert,   Capt.— V.  2,  310. 

Boggs,  John — V.  3,  1st  marriage  in  Prescott  211,  v.  4,  269. 

Boggs,  John  M. — Member   1st  Leg.  90. 

Boggs,  T.  W.— V.  8,  150. 

Boggs,  Theo. — v,  2,  early  settler  249. 

Bonneville,  Capt. — v.  2,  exped.  against  Coyotero  Apache  30. 

Bonilla,  Don  Manuel  Diaz — v.  1,  commr.  for  Mex.  arranges  de- 
tails "Gadsden  Purchase"  189-90. 

Boone,  Wm. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 

Bornman,  Daniel  M. — v.  4,  184. 

Bosque  Redondo — v.  2,  res.  of  Navajo  and  Mescalero  Apache 
172,  fitness  174,  opposed  by  Dr.  Steck  175,  Navajo  leave  178, 
com.  investigates  178,  peace  commrs  agree  to  return  Navajo 
to  their  own  country   179. 

Boucard,  Padre  Francis — v.  4,  at  Tucson  293-4. 

Bouchet,  Luis  G. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90. 

Boundary — v.  5,  Ariz,  and  Cal.  in  McCormick's  message  5th  Leg. 
41,  report  of  Com.  on  boundaries  between  Ariz,  and  Cal.  50. 

Boundary  Commission  Survey— v.  1,  183,  186-99,  210,  218,  227,  237, 
264. 

Bouns,  Mrs.  (Donna  Tomase) — v.  8,  warns  of  Wickenburg  mas- 
sacre 299. 

Bourke,  Capt.  John  G. — v.  7,  desc.  Apache  dances  29,  snake  dance 
of  Hopi  204,  V.  8,  attempt  on  Crook's  life  318,  inv.  Wick- 
enburg massacre  304. 

Bowers,  Billy— v.  2,   117. 

Bowers,  Geo.— v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  223,  301,  310,  337,  v.  8,  131. 

Bowers,  Herbert — v.  8,  171. 

Bowers  &  Co.— v.  6,  229. 

Bowers  Brothers — v.  8,  herds  stolen  by  Indians  147,  149. 

Bowers'  Ranch— v.  3,  29,  v.  4,  272. 

Bowie,  Col.  Geo.  W. — v.  2,  officer  Cal.  Column  9L 

Bowie,  Fort — See  Fort  Bowie. 

Boyce — v.  8,  exped.  against  Indians  170. 

Boyd,  John— V.  6,  91,  92. 

Bradford,  Edward — v.  7,  evolution  of  man  319,  320. 

Bradley,  Geo.  T. — v.  5,  member  Powell's  1st  exped.  180. 

Bradshaw,  Isaac — v.  3,  89. 

Bradshaw,  Wm.  D. — v.  3,  defeated  for  Congress  88,  bio.  89,  1st 
Leg.  gives  right  for  ferry  135. 

Brady,  Peter  R. — v.  1,  member  Ariz.  Mining  &  Trading  Co.'s 
party  278,  early  resident  Tucson  345,  v.  2,  bio.  283,  v.  4,  Vekol 
mine  119,  v.  6,  54. 

Brainard,  William — v.  2,  5. 

Brannaman,  John — ^v.  6,  92. 

Brecht,  W.— v.  6,  88,  92. 

Breckenridge,  Fort — See  Fort  Breckenridge. 

Brevoort — v.  1,  at  Patagonia  mine  292,  v.  2,  at  Mowry  mine  68. 

Brichta,  Augustus — v.  3,  member  and  historian  Woolsey's  2d  ex- 
ped. 273. 

Bridger,  Jim— v.  1,  107. 

Bridges,  Edwd.  L.— v.  4,  308. 

Brill,  Fritz— V.  2,  mill  at  Vulture  mine  214,  v.  4,  281. 

Brinkerhoff,  David — v.  4,  early  Mormon  settler  276. 

Brinkley,  Chas.  H.— v.  3,  80. 

Brinley,  C.  H.— v.  6,  124. 

Broadway,  Noah  M.— v.  6,  88,  89,  90,  92. 

Broderick,  Jno. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 

Brodie,  J.  P. — v.  1,  furnishes  money  for  ferry  across  Colorado  235. 

Brooks— V.  2,  partner  Chas.  T.  Hayden  290. 

6 


Brooks,  Maj. — v.  1,  commander  Ft,  Defiance  311,  skirmish  with 
Navajos  317,  v.  8,  133. 

Brooks,  Hezekiah— V.  3,  Comr.  to  lay  out  and  dispose  of  lots 
in  Prescott  192,  marries  211,  1st  probate  judge  in  Yavapai 
Co.  247. 

Brown,  Sergt.  Chas. — v.  3,  special  mention  283. 

Brown,  Chas.  O. — v.  1,  member  Glanton  party,  escaping  massacre 
236,  V.  2,  60,  monopoly  liquor  and  gambling  at  Tucson  118, 
bio.  185,  writes  "History  of  Arizona"  186,  v.  3,  writes  Carleton 
in  relation  to  gold  disc.  14,  v,  4,  witness  in  trial  173. 

Brown,  E.  K.— v.  3,  78. 

Brown,  Geo.  A. — v.  6,  50, 

Brown,  H. — v.  4,  settler  on  San  Pedro  247. 

Brown,  "Nigger" — v.   3,   35. 

Brown,  Sam — v.  2,  killed  by  Apaches,  one  cause  Camp  Grant 
massacre  281,  v.  8,  139,  164. 

Brown,  W.  H, — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Brown,  W.  R.— v.  6,  88, 

Brown,  Wm. — v.  4,  killed  by  Indians  86. 

Browne,  J.  Ross — v.  2,  conditions  in  Ariz.  52,  Butterworth's  ex- 
perience with  Apaches  155,  v.  3,  on  mineral  resources  2, 
descr.  Ter.  203,  v.  8,  2. 

Brownley — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  136. 

Brunkow — v.  1,  engineer  for  Sonora  Exploring  &  Mining  Co.  280. 

Bryan,  George— v.  6,  90,  v.  8,  296. 

Bryan,  J.  M.  (Crete) — v.  4,  68,  69,  v.  6,  90,  1st  harvesting  machinery 
137,  216,  V.  8,  298,  299. 

Bryant,   Robt.— v.  4,  308. 

Buchanan,  Fort — See  Fort  Buchanan. 

Buck,  Geo. — v.  6,  92,  1st  marriage  in  Phoenix  222,  223. 

Buckalew,  Oscar — v.  4,  elected  to  3d  Leg.  165,  v.  5,  wounded  by 
Indians  318. 

Buckley,  William — v.  2,  Supt.  Butterfield  stage  line  5. 

Buckman,  J.  J. — v.  4,  fight  with  Indians  133. 

Buckman,  Thad. — v.  4,  133. 

Buenaventura,  Francisco  de  San — v.  7,  missionary  to  Hopi  140. 

Buker.  E.  K.— v.  6,  91,  92,  1st  postmaster  Mill  City  119. 

Bull,  John — V.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 

Bullard,  John— v.  8,  181. 

Bullock,  J.  T.— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  135. 

Bullock,  T.  H.— V.  5,  builds  R.  R.  to  Prescott  349. 

Bumos,  Lt.  Peter  S.— v.  8,  228. 

Bunch,  E.  C. — v.  6,  reminiscences  284. 

Burchville — v.  2,  on  Mimbres  river  76. 

Burger,  John— v.  8,  147,  195.  301. 

Burke — v.  3,  shoots  A.  G.  Dunn  36,  38. 

Burke,  John  P. — v.  3.  one  owners  "Prescott  House"  35.  36. 

Burnett,  Lieut. — v.  3,  fight  with  Irniians  282. 

Burnett.  William — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 

Burns,  Capt.  Jas. — v.  3,  capture  Mike  Burns  289. 

Burns,  Mike  (Mohave-Apache) — v.  3.  Indians'  side  of  question 
288.  captured  289.  habits,  etc.,  290.  fights  with  soldiers  292, 
killing  Indian  Agt.  Leihy  296.  Skull  valley  fight  297.  Pauline 
Weaver,  kill  Yavapai  298,  Pinole  treaty  304,  Apache  chief 
•  warns  Indians  against  meeting  306,  bows  and  arrows  311, 
steal  soldiers'  horses  328,  fights  with  N.  M.  Vols.  329,  killing 
of  medicine  man  and  breaking  up  of  Cibicu  Apache  336. 
Burns'  1st  scout  with  soldiers  339,  fight  of  Del-shav  with 
Pima  350,  fight  with  soldiers  between  Reno  and  McDowell 
353,  v.  7,  Apache  medicine  man  26,  myths  of  Walapai  134. 

7 


Burns,  Wm. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Burnt  Ranch — v.  5,  Indians  attack  311. 

Burroughs,  Joseph — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  149. 

Butcher,  Capt.  John  H. — ^v.  3,  officer  with  escort  of  gubernatorial 

party  68. 
Butler,    Benj.    F. — v.    5,    opposes    improvement    Colorado    river 

Indian  res.  92. 
Butterfield,  John — v.  2,  Pres.  stage  line  4. 
Butterheld,  Wm.— v.  3,  80. 
Butterfield   Stage   Line — v.   2,   organized  4,   takes   over   Birch   & 

Woods'  line  5,  merged  into  Overland  Mail  Co.  5,  Silas  St. 
•     John    party   attacked   by    Mex.   6,    discontinuance    10,    route, 

time,  etc.  10,  change  of  route   14,  sale  to  Ben  Holliday  and 

Wells-Fargo,  machinery  hauled  over  for  mines  16. 
Butterworth,   Samuel — v.   2,   experience   w^ith   Apaches    155,   v.   3, 

incorporators  Ariz.  Ry.    138. 
Buxton,  Phelix — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 
Byrne,   Capt.  Thos. — v.  8,   outbreak   Walapai  9,   investigation   of 

Wickenburg  massacre  306. 


Cababi  Mines — v.  5,  in  Gov.  McCormick's  message  38. 

Caballo  En  Pelo — v.  1,  Yuma  chief,  hostile  239. 

Cabeza  de  Vaca,  Alvar  Nunez — v.  1,  journey  1,  healing  powers  2, 
end  of  journey  4,  subsequent  life  5. 

Caborca — v.  1,  329,  where  Crabb  and  party  were  killed  333. 

Cabrillo — v.  1,  disc.  Cal.  120. 

Cady,  John — v. '6,  opens  1st  restaurant  in  Phoenix  214. 

Cahuabi  Mining  Co. — v.  2,  73. 

Calabazas — v.  1,  hist.  77,  gold  mines  77,  v.  5,  Mason's  report  184. 

Calderwood,  Capt.  M.  H. — v.  4,  in  regard  to  Gov.  Ignacio  Pes- 
queira  190,   191. 

Calhoun,  Gov. — v.  1,  treaty  with  Navajo  308. 

Calhoun,  Lt.— v.  8,  50. 

Calhoun,  Major — v.  5,  White's  trip  through  Grand  Canyon  144. 

California — v.  1,  conquest  by  Fremont  and  Sloat  119,  disc,  by 
Cabrillo  120,  colonized  by  Spaniards  120,  pop,  in  1846  122, 
Americans  ordered  to  leave  122,  "Bear  Flag"  raised  by 
Americans,  join  Fremont  and  drive  Mex,  south  123,  taken 
for  U.  S.  by  Sloat  and  Fremont  123,  meeting  to  consider 
annex.  151,  immigration  over  southern  route  234,  v.  4,  dis- 
pute over  ownership  of  Yuma  203,  v.  5,  boundary  mentioned 
in  McCormick's  message  to  5th  Leg.  41,  report  Leg.  Com. 
50,  V.  8,  Leg.  passes  resolution  relating  to  Indian  affairs  196. 

California  Column — v.  2,  California  Column  of  Union  vols,  to 
Ariz.  84,  87,  fight  with  Confed.,  Barrett  killed  88,  Lt.  Col. 
West  takes  Tucson  for  Union  88,  Jones  and  McCleave  cap- 
tured by  Confed.  87,  estab.  Ft.  Barrett  and  re-estab.  Fts.  Bu- 
chanan and  Breckenridge  102,  re-estab.  Ft.  Lowell  88,  causes 
of  organization  of  89,  suggested  by  Gen.  Wright  89,  endorsed 
by  McClellan  91,  exped.  91,  v.  3,  soldiers  permitted  to  pros- 
pect 40,  153,  V.  4,  74,  mustered  out  122,  v.  5,  Mason's  report 
184. 

California,  Gulf  of — v.  I,  Alarcon  ascends  19,  Onate  marches  to  31. 

California  Volunteers — See  California  Column. 

Calkins,  Jerome  B. — v.  3,  shoots  A.  G.  Dunn  37,  v.  8,  wounded 
by  Indians   128. 

Call,  Anson— V.  3,  founder  of  Callville  252. 

Calloway,  Capt.  Wm.  P. — v.  2,  officer  California  Column  88. 

Callville— V.  3,  145,  252,  v.  4,   13. 

8 


Camels — v.  1,  approp.  by  Congress  for  importation  354,  Jefferson 
Davis  secures  importation,  Maj,  H.  C.  Wayne  and  Lt.  D.  D. 
Porter  bring  to  U.  S.,  characteristics,  etc.,  354,  number  im- 
ported 355,  used  by  Lt.  Beale  in  Ariz.  356,  Greek  George 
and  Hi  Jolly,  camel  attendants  357,  abandoned  360,  wild 
along  Gila,  herd  taken  to  menagerie  Kansas  City  361,  made 
into  "'jerky",  introduction  into  New  World  362,  habits,  abili- 
ties, etc.,  363. 

Camp  Apache — v.  8,  Vincent  Colyer  estab.  res.  221. 

Camp  Calhoun — v.   1,  234. 

Camp  Clark — v.  3,  1st  capital  46. 

Camp  Goodwin — v.  8,  location  93. 

Camp  Grant — v.  8,  Vincent  Colyer  estab.  Indian  res.  16. 

Camp  Grant  Massacre — v.  2,  desc,  by  Oury  2,  Whitman  respon- 
sible 270,  protest  against  lack  of  military  protection  272, 
exped.  273,  Papago  Indians  assist  274,  massacre  280,  Pres. 
Grant  threatens  martial  law  if  participants  not  punished, 
indicted  282,  v.  5,  291,  v.  8,  public  sentiment  in  regard  to  153, 
military  acct.  157,  trial  of  participants  and  charge  of  Judge 
Titus   to  jury   161. 

Camp  Lowell — v.  2,  estab.  by  Cal.  Column  88. 

Camp  McDowell — v.  8,  Vincent  Colyer  estab.  Indian  res.  16,  abol- 
ished by  Howard  16. 

Camp  Ord — v.  8,  estab.  by  Col.  Jno.  Green,  name  changed  Ft. 
Apache    95. 

Camp  Verde — v.  8,  Apache-Mohave  on  res.  10,  res.  estab.  by 
Vincent  Colyer  12,  278. 

Campbell,  A.  H. — v.  1,  member  Whipple's  party  266,  member 
Parke's  2d  party  269. 

Campbell,  Jno.  G. — v.  5,  335. 

Campbell  &  Buffum — v.  4,  early  merchants  Prescott  260. 

Campio,  Diego — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  140, 

Canals  and  Ditches — v.  6,  ancient  29,  around  Florence  51,  Salt 
River  valley  85,  146. 

Canby,  Gen. — v,  2,  succeeds  Loring  85,  conducts  exped.  against 
Navajo    121. 

Canoa — v.  2,  55,  56. 

Canon  de  Chelly— v.  1,  306,  Navajo  stronghold  307-8,  v.  2,  167, 

Capital— V.  3,  Camp  Clark  1st  46,  Ft.  Whipple  72,. fight  on  loca- 
tion in  1st  Leg.  118,  capitol  building  erected  in  Prescott  by 
Christy  &  Van  Smith  213,  v.  5,  located  at  Tucson  by  4th 
Leg.  28,  Congress  asked  by  5th  Leg,  for  approp.  for  capitol 
building    43. 

Capron,  Jno.  G. — v.  1,  desc.  of  exped.  into  Mex.  330,  wounded  by 
Mex.  337,  resident  of  Tucson  345,  v.  2,  pony  rider  and  mail 
carrier  3,  v,  3,  79,  member  1st  Leg.  90,  131, 

Carbon,  Col. — v.  1,  Spanish  commander  Presidio  of  Tucson,  peace 
with  Apache  349. 

Cardenas,  Garcia  Lopez  de — v.  1,  helps  save  Coronado  fight  of 
Seven  Cities  of  Cibola  18,  sent  by  Coronado  in  search  of 
large  river  22,  return  24. 

Carey,  Captain — v.  2,  exped.  against  Navajo  170. 

Carillo,  Baltazar — v.  7,  early  priest  at  San  Xavier  299. 

Carleton,  Gen.  Jas.  H. — v.  1,  arrests  Sylvester  Mowry  293,  v.  2, 
command  of  California  Column  87,  arrives  Tucson,  declares 
Ter.  under  martial  law  88.  arrests  Mowry  104,  proclamation 
organizing  Ter.  of  Ariz.  110,  made  Brig.  Gen.,  appoints  Clark 
Sec  of  Ter.  114,  levies  merchants'  licenses  115,  succeeds 
Canby,  estab.  Ft.  Bowie  121,  orders  as  to  Indians  143,  testi- 
mony before   Com.  Investigation  Indian   affairs  163,   directs 

9 


Kit  Carson  conduct  campaign  against  Navajo  164,  opposes 
removal  Navajo  from  Bosque  Redondo  175,  creates  new  mili- 
tary dist.  in  Ariz.  250,  v.  3,  sends  Pishon  exped,  Ariz,  to  in- 
vestigate disc,  gold  3,  letter  to  Capt.  Walker  4,  value  of  disc. 
16,  sends  exped.  Ariz,  to  estab.  post  at  gold  diggings  31, 
exped,  to  locate  Ft.  Whipple  41,  vols,  allowed  to  prospect 
153,  v.  8,  favors  extermination  Indians  20. 

Carley,  Bob — v.  6,  early  settler  in  Tempe  109. 

Carpenter,  Cromwell  A. — v.  6,  92,  pioneer  saloon  keeper  192. 

Carr,  Jno. — v.  4,  264. 

Carr,  Larkin  W.— v.  6,  66,  208. 

Carr,  Lt.  Col.  Camillio,  C.  C. — v.  5,  196. 

Carrol — v.  2,  killed  by  Apache,  one  cause  Camp  Grant  massacre 
281,  V.  8,  164. 

Carroll — v.  8,  captured  by  Indians  136. 

Carroll,  A.  J. — v.  2,  member  Ives  explor.  party  19. 

Carrol,  Lt.  C.  C— v.  5,  102,  killed  by  Indians  103. 

Carson,  Col.  C.  (Kit) — v.  1,  94,  hist.,  identified  with  Fremontl05. 
guides  Kearny's  command  110,  134,  with  Lt.  Beale  trip  to 
San  Diego  110,  Lt.  U.  S.  Rifle  Corps,  adventures  111,  Indian 
Agt  113,  death  115,  v.  2,  campaign  against  Navajo  164,  v.  3, 
report  on  Hopi  Indians  157,  158,  v.  7,  38. 

Carter,  Chas. — v.  6,  justice  of  peace  123,  133. 

Carter,  Eugene — v.  6,  leads  Pima  and  Maricopa  in  raid  on  Apache 
141,  142. 

Carter,  Judge  Harley  H. — v.  3,  succeeds  Judge  Jno.  P.  Allyn  246, 
v.  4,  320,  V.  6,  6th  Leg.  124,  Pres.  council  125. 

Carter,  Jas.   P.  T.— v.  4,   166. 

Casa  Grande — v.  1,  25,  Padre  Kino  1st  white  visitor  59,  Padre 
Ignacio  Keller  61,  v.  7,  Pima  legend  regarding  239. 

Casey,  Jno. — v.  6,  erects  walls  for  1st  school  building  in  Phoenix 
246. 

Castenada — v.  1,  historian  Coronado's  exped.  24. 

Castle  Dome — v.  2,  early  mining  dist.  292,  299,  v.  4,  9,  256. 

Gate,  C.  R— V.  6,  89,  90,  184. 

Catholic  Church — v.  4,  re-estab.  in  Ter.  290,  priests  provided  293, 
294,  building  church  in  Tucson  295. 

Cavaness,  A.  T. — v.  6,  claimed  to  have  been  1st  American  born 
in  Phoenix  224. 

Cavaness,   Jeremiah — v.  6,   92. 

Cavaness,  Matt — v.  6,  1st  brewer  in   Phoenix   179,  192-3. 

Cavaness  &  Cosgrove — v.  6,  pioneer  saloon  keepers  of  Phoenix 
192-3.  216. 

Cazada  Mine — v.  2,  71. 

Cervantes.  Lt. — v.  4,  officer  Ariz.  Vols.  103. 

Chacon,  Capt. — v.  3,  with  escort  gubernatorial  party  68. 

Chaffee,  Adna  R. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Chaingang — v.  4,  estab.  in  Tucson  254,  255. 

Chamberlin,  J. — v.  6,  1st  beekeeper  in  Phoenix  215. 

Chambers — v.  1,  member  exped.  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  in 
Mex.    332. 

Chambers.  Nick— v.  2,  117. 

Chambers,  Sol.  W.— v.  4,  165.  v.  5,  34. 

Chamuscado,  Francisco  Sanchez — v.  7,  139. 

Chapin — v.  8.  killed  by  Indians  147. 

Chapin.  Lt.— v.  2,  60.  61. 

Chase— v.  2.  243. 

Chaves,  Lt.  Col.  J.  Francisco — v.  2.  captures  and  kills  Gardo  154. 
V.  3,  commands  escort  gubernatorial  party  to  Ft.  Whipple  68. 

Chavis.  Pablo — v.  1,  leader  insurrection  in  N.  M.  148. 

10 


Chemehueva  Mining  District — v.  4,  9. 

Chemehuevi — v.  5,  treaty  with  Supt,  Dent  244,  v.  7,  314-15. 

Chenowith,  Gus — v.  6,  conducts  private  school  in  Phoenix  245. 

Chenowith,  J.  A.— v.  6,  88,  89,  90,  kills  Jim  Favorite  101. 

Chenowith  &  Fenter — v.  6,  early  freighters  216. 

Chiavria,  Juan — v.  2,  Maricopa  chief  assists  Woolsey  in  "Pinole 
Treaty"  218,  v.  4,  124. 

Chichiltecale — v.   1,  "Little  Red   House"    17. 

Chimney  Peak — v.  4,  placers  9. 

Chinese — v.  6,  1st  in  Phoenix  214. 

Chiricahua  Apache — v.  2,  30,  v.  7,  wars  with  whites  2,  hist.,  cus- 
toms, etc.,  6,  v.  8,  res.  14,  15,  restored  to  public  domain  16. 

Chitter,  Doctor— v.  4,  102. 

Christie,  F.  G. — v.  3,  clerk  1st  probate  court  in  Yavapai  Co.  247, 
V.  5,  2. 

Christmas  Tree — v.  4,  1st  in  Ariz.  89. 

Churches — v.  1,  1st  in  N.  M.  founded  by  Onate  39,  structure  70, 
V.  4,  re-estab.  Catholic  churches  in  Ter.  290,  v.  6,  1st  Catholic 
church  in  central  Ariz.,  in  Florence,  57,  estab.  in  Salt  River 
valley  235,  1st  Catholic  service  in  Salt  River  valley  240,  241, 
services  of  Rev,  Chas.  tj.  Cook  among  Pima  and  Maricopa 
241. 

Cibicu  Apache — v.  3,  breaking  up  336, 

Cibola — See  Seven  Cities  of  Cibola. 

Cienega — v.  8,  stage  employes  murder  passengers  202-3. 

Clark,  C. — v.  3,  1st  sawmill  vicinity  Prescott  216. 

Clark,  Gen. — v.  2,  assists  Ives  18,  interested  in  Stevenson  mine  74. 

Clark,  Surv.  Gen.  Jno.  H. — v.  2,  visits  Walker  party  246,  v.  3, 
Surv.  Gen.  of  N.  Al.  exped.  into  Ariz.  3,  instructions  from 
Carleton  7,  reports  20-26,  v.  4,  report  to  Comr.  of  Gen.  Land 
Office   305-6. 

Clark,  Lt.  Peter  F. — v.  3,  officer  with  gubernatorial  party  68. 

Clark,  Marion — v.  6,  pioneer  of  Round  valley  277. 

Clark,  Camp — See  Camp  Clark. 

Claros,  Padr€  Juan  de — v.  7,  missionary  to  Hopi  140. 

Clendenin,  Major — v.  8,  scout  against  Indians  24. 

Clifford,  Mrs.  Josephine — v,  2,  marries  Jackson  McCracken  265. 

Clifton — V.    4,    copper    deposits    280. 

Clifton,   Henry — v.  4,  clerk  3d  Leg.  184. 

Climate — v.  3,  m>entioned  by  Goodwin  114,  descr.  by  McCormick 
V.  4,  3. 

Clinton  &  Baxter— v.  3,  79. 

Clothier — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 

Clow^er,  Edwd.— V.  2,  killed  by  Walapai  259,  v.  8,  129. 

Clum,  John  P. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Coal  Mines— V.  2,  75. 

Cochise — V.  2,  war  chief  of  Chiricahua  Apache  30,  ill  treatment 
by  Bascom  and  enmity  to  whites  31,  acct.  by  Pumpelly  S3, 
fight  at  Stein's  pass  59,  attacks  at  Apache  pass  with  Mangas 
Coloradas  126-7,  war  against  whites  152,  visited  by  Jeffords 
227,  by  Howard  230,  treaty  with  Howard,  insists  on  Jeffords 
for  Indian  agt.  234,  death  237,  v.  8,  commands  Apache  in  fight 
wnth  Barnard  27,  head  of  band  that  killed  Gushing  166. 

Coco-Maricopa — v.   2,   26. 

Cocopah  Indians — v.  2,  26,  warn  Maricopa  of  intended,  attack  29. 

Cocospera — v.  1,  visited  by  Padre  Kino  58. 

Cogswell,  Col. — V.  8,  instructions  for  expeds.  against  Indians  115, 
trip  through  Indian  country  117. 

Cohen,  B. — v.  2.  partner  of  Michael  Goldwater  286. 

Coleman,   Wm.  T.— v.   1,  280. 

1-1 


Collas,  A.  &  Co. — V.  6,  early  merchants  in  Phoenix  176. 

Collier — v.  2,  263. 

Collier,  Col.  Jas. — v.  3,  collector  port  of  San  Francisco,  opinion 
of  Ariz.  1. 

Collingvvood,  Jos. — v.  6,  opens  1st  store  in  Florence  49. 

Collins,  Jack — v.  3,  44. 

Collins,  John — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Collins,  Major — v.  8,  72,  exped,  against  Indians  112. 

Collins,  Morton — v.  6,  92. 

Collins,  W.  C. — V.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 

Colorado  Chiquito — v.  1,  disc,  by  Espejo  29,  crossed  by  Onate  48. 

Colorado  City — v.  1,  estab.  Cal.  side  Colorado  river,  name  changed 
to  Arizona  City,  then  Yuma  252,  survey  319,  352. 

Colorado  Ferry — v.  1,  estab.  by  Cave  J.  Coutts  234,  Dr.  Lang- 
don  estab.  ferry  235. 

Colorado  River — v.  1,  Alarcon  disc.  19,  name  changed  by  Onate 
"Rio  de  Buena  Esperanza"  49,  Padre  Kino  60,  Padre  Garces 
estab.  presidio-pueblo  and  missions  1Z,  Sitgreaves  makes 
reconnaissance  264,  v.  3,  navigation  mentioned  in  Goodwin's 
message  114,  report  com.  1st  Leg.  on  119,  Congress  asked  by 
1st  Leg.  for  approp.  to  improve  143,  in  Gov.'s  message  152, 
V.  4,  ferries  at  Mohave,  La  Paz  and  Yuma  12,  navigation  13, 
Congress  asked  to  improve  162. 

Colorado  River  Copper  Mine — v.  2,  74. 

Colorado  River  Gold  Mine — v.  2,  76. 

Colt,  Col. — V.  2,  one  owner  Ariz.  Land  &  Mining  Co.  74,  v.  4,  54. 

Colt,  Samuel — v.  1,  director  Sonora  Explor.  &  Mining  Co.  280. 

Colter,  Jas.  G.  H. — v.  6,  experiences  with  Indians  and  outlaws  293. 

Columbia — v.  6,  should  read  Cumberland  55. 

Colyer,  Vincent — v.  7,  147,  v.  8,  estab.  Indian  res.  at  Date  Creek 
and  Camp  Verde  12,  278,  arrival  in  Ariz,  report  211,  criticises 
proclamation  of  Safford  247,  281. 

Commodoran — v.  2,  rescues  Samuel  Butterworth  160. 

Compadre   Mine — v.   2,  71. 

Compostela — v.    1,    17. 

Concepcion,  Cristobal  de  la — v.  7,  missionary  to  Hopi  140. 

Conde,  Gen.  Pedro  Garcia — v.  1,  Mex.  on  Boundary  Commission 
Survey  206,  co-operates  with  Bartlett  in  rescue  Inez  Gonzales 
207. 

Confederates — v.  2,  Texan  invasion  83,  in  Ariz.,  California  Col- 
umn Union  Vols,  comes  to  Ariz.,  attempt  to  attach  Union 
troops  to  Confederacy  84,  Lynde  at  Ft.  Fillmore  surrenders 
to  Baylor  85,  convention  at  Tucson  declares  Ariz,  part  of 
Confederacy,  Oury  elected  to  Confed.  Congress  86,  Texans 
at  Tucson  87,  battle  at  Picacho  88,  101,  capture  of  Jones  and 
McCleave  87,  retreat  from  Tucson  88,  report  of  Hunter  92, 
enabling  act  for  Ter.  of  Ariz.,  proclamation  of  Jefferson 
Davis  organizing  Ter.,  Granville  Oury  and  Marcus  H.  Mc- 
Willie  Delegates  to  Confed.  Congress  94,  Baylor  authorized 
to  raise  troops  in  Ariz.,  plan  to  recover  Ariz,  and  N.  M.  for 
Confederacy  97,  arrest  of  A.  M.  White  for  purchasing  sup- 
plies for  Union  troops  93,  capture  Carleton's  dispatch  bear- 
ers  120. 

Congress — v.  4,  approp.  for  presents  to  Indians  121,  refuses  to 
keep  Volunteer  181,  3d  Leg.  asks  act  giving  Pah-Ute  Co.  to 
Nev.  be  repealed  193,  asked  to  estab.  mail  routes  196,  act  to 
estab.  land  office  in  Ariz.  198,  approp.  for  Indians  198,  act 
providing  for  erection  of  penitentiaries  201,  fails  to  pass  bill 
for  wagon  road  202,  fails  to  pass  bill  for  improvement  Colo- 
rado river  202,  fails  to  pass  bill  prohibiting  special  leg.  con- 

12 


cerning  divorces  202,  passes  bill  annexing  Pah-Ute  and  part 
of  Mohave  Co.  to  Nev.  202,  v.  5,  asked  by  4th  Leg.  for  regi- 
ment of  vols.,  to  increase  jurisdiction  of  justices  of  peace,  to 
allow  duties  paid  in  currency,  protesting  against  annex,  part 
Ariz,  to  Nev.,  to  assume  certain  indebtedness  of  Ter.,  to  in- 
crease pay  of  Legislators  and  officers  of  Ter.  15,  passes  reso- 
lution asking  Congress  make  Ariz,  separate  military  dept., 
asked  by  5th  Leg.  for  authority  to  military  commanders  to 
arm  citizens,  for  extension  of  time  for  approp.  of  net  pro- 
ceeds of  internal  revenue  for  building  penitentiary,  mail  route 
from  Tucson  to  Sasabi  Flat,  for  library,  to  codify  laws,  ap- 
pointment of  Surv.  Gen.  43,  5th  Leg,  asks  for  mail  route 
Tucson  to  Wickenburg  and  from  Prescott  to  Albuquerque, 
recommends  estab.  U.  S.  depository  at  Tucson,  requests  Del. 
in  Congress  to  solicit  premium  for  1st  person  to  sink  ar- 
tesian well  on  desert  44,  postal  bill  favoring  Ariz,  passed  94, 
passes  act  legalizing  actions  of  3d,  4th  and  5th  Legs.  98. 

Congress  Hall — v.  2,  built  by  C,  O.  Brown  186. 

Connell,  Mike— v.  6,  82,  92. 

Conner,  Daniel  E. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  145,  243,  descr. 
capture  and  killing  of  Mangas  Coloradas  145. 

Constitutional  Convention — v.  1,  at  Tucson  325. 

Cook — v.  6,  1st  photographer  in  Phoenix  215. 

Cook — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  146. 

Cook,  Rev.  Chas.  H. — v.  6,  services  among  Pima  and  Maricopa 
241,  V.  7,  238,  V.  8,  250. 

Cook,  Edward  J. — v.  5,  2,  bio.  31. 

Cook,  PI.  C. — v.  2,  appointed  district  judge  by  Baylor  of  Confed. 
forces  85. 

Cook,   Henry  D.— v.  4,   199. 

Cook,  Jay— v.  4,  199. 

Cook  &  Bowers — v.  3,  early  Prescott  merchants  213. 

Cooke — ^v.  1,  member  Ariz.  Mining  &  Trading  Co.  278. 

Cooke,  Nathan  P. — v.  1,  unofficial  delegate  to  Congress  323. 

Cooke,  Lt.  Col.  P.  St.  Geo. — v.  1,  peaceful  mission  to  Mex.  130. 
commands  Mormon  Battalion  134,  begins  march  137-8, 
reaches  Tucson  140,  letter  to  Gov.  of  Sonora  141,  reaches 
Pima  villages  143,  Maricopa  villages  145,  crosses  Colorado 
146,  V.  2,  2. 

Cooler,  Geo.— V.  3,  38,  v.  8,  50. 

Cooley,  C.  E. — v.  2,  old  scout,  desc.  killing  Mangas  Coloradas  144, 
V.  6,  bio.  275-8,  v.  8,  prospecting  trip  into  Indian  country  33, 
later  life  75. 

Cooley,  David — v.  6,  92. 

Cooper — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  148. 

Copeland,  Francis  M. — v.  4,  184. 

Copeland,  Isaac — v.  6,  early  owner  in  Silver  King  mine  60. 

Copeland  &  Steel — v.  6,  early  butchers  in  Phoenix  196. 

Corazones — v.  1,  3,   17. 

Cordoba,  Leonard — v.  8,  Mex.  outlaw  lynched  205. 

Coronado,  Francisco  Vasquez  de — v.  1,  commands  exped.  to 
Seven  Cities  of  Cibola  16-18,  route  25,  return  26. 

Corporations — v.  4,  3d  Leg.  passes  law  188. 

Cory,   William— v.   4.    184. 

Cosgrove — v.  8,   127. 

Cosgrove,  Frank — v.  6,  early  blacksmith   in  Phoenix    179.   192-3. 

Cosgrove,  Joseph — v.  3.  killed  by  Indians  near  Prescott  199. 

Cosninos — See  Havasupai. 

Cotton,  Jas.  M.— v.  6.  193. 

Cottrell,  David— V.  6,  92. 

13 


Coudert,  J.  M. — v.  4,  priest  visits  Ter.  with  Bishop  Lamy  290-91. 

Coues,  Dr.  Elliott — v.  3,  post  surgeon  Ft.  Whipple  Z7,  divorced  by 
1st  Ter.  Leg.  131. 

Coulter,  Geo.— V.  2,  member  Walker  party  243,  v.  3,  80,  v.  4,  157, 
V.  6,  165. 

Counties — v.  3,  Ter.  divided  into  93,  Gov.  Goodwin's  message  101. 

Courts — V.  3,  1st  term  held  in  Tucson  246,  1st  in  Prescott  246, 
probate  court  of  Yavapai  Co.  organized  247,  1st  session 
Supreme  Court  247,  v,  4,  2d  Leg.  sets  date  for  holding  Su- 
preme Court  155,  gives  jurisdiction  to  dist.  courts  in  all 
mining  cases  157,  terms  of  dist.  courts  lixed  by  3d  Leg.  185, 
condition  of  records  204,  charge  of  Chief  Justice  Turner  to 
grand  jury  212,  v.  6,  1st  dist.  in  Maricopa  Co.  presided  over 
by  Judge  Chas.  Tweed  136,  Chief  Justice  Wm.  F.  Turner 
succeeded  by  Jno.  Titus   136,  213. 

Coutts,  Lt.  Cave  J. — v.  1,  commanding  escort  to  Boundary  Com- 
mission Survey  estab.  Ft.  Calhoun  on  Cal.  side  Colorado 
river  and  assists  immigrants  234,  estab.  1st  ferry  across  Colo- 
rado 234-5. 

Coyotero  Apache — v.  2,  Bonneville's  exped.  against  30,  warpath 
30,  V.  7,  wars  with  whites  2,  descr.  13,  14,  18,  v,  8,  on  res.  5. 

Cozozo — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  136. 

Cozzens,  Samuel  G. — v.  1,  early  judge  326. 

Crabb  IMassacre — v.  1,  327. 

Cradlebaugh,  Lt.— v.  5,  attacked  by  Indians  282-3,  v.  8.  116,  142-3. 

Craig,  Lt.  Col. — v.  1,  commands  escort  Boundary  Commission 
Survey  202. 

Crandal,  Robt.  M.— v.  5,  34. 

Creagh,  Paddy — v.  6,  killed  by  Indians  290. 

Cremony,  Capt.  Jno.  C. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission 
Survey  184,  descr.  Apache  200,  shooting  of  Delgadito  229, 
explorations  271,  attacked  by  Apaches  272,  v.  2,  descr.  battle 
at  Apache  Pass  127,  v.  4,  123. 

Cressy,  Capt. — v.  8,  33. 

Crittenden,  Col.  Geo.  B. — v.  2,  espouses  Confed.  cause  84. 

Crittenden,  Col.  T.  L. — v.  5,  commended  by  4th  Leg.  18,  men- 
tioned in  military  report  208,  recommendations  as  to  housing 
troops  234,  succeeds  to  command  in  southern  Ariz.  298. 

Croix,  Gen. — v.  1,  reforms  68. 

Crook,  Gen.  Geo. — v.  2,  207,  v.  3,  145,  v.  4,  75,  v.  7,  1,  v.  8,  opposes 
removal  Indians  to  San  Carlos  14,  succeeds  Stoneman  104, 
199,  suspends  operations  pending  arrival  peace  com.  209, 
receives  Colyer  279,  investigation  Wickenburg. massacre  304, 
attempts  against  life  308. 

Cross,  Ed. — V.  1,  early  resident  Tucson  345,  prints  1st  newspaper 
352,  bloodless  duel  with  Mo  wry  352. 

Cross,  G.  C. — V.  2,  pioneer  miner  307. 

Cross,  L.— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  128. 

Crowley,  C.  P.— v.  6,  88. 

Cuevas,  Louis  G. — v.  1,  Mex.  Comr.,  treaty  Guadalupe  Hidalgo 
.  153. 

Culbertson,  Jno.  A. — v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  224. 

Cullumber,  Andrew — v.  5,  2. 

Cullumber,  Sam — v.  4,  killed  by  Mex.  70,  murderers  killed  70-1. 

Cummings,  Hiram — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 

Cunningham — v.  2,  partner  of  Herman  Ehrenberg  193. 

Cunningham,  Chas. — v.  8.  killed  by  Indians  128. 

Cunningham,  Wm. — v.  2,  with  1st  stage  line  in  Ariz.  3,  killed 
by   Mex.  7. 

14 


Curtis — V.  6,  early  resident  of  Phoenix  246-7. 

Curtis,  Capt.  Jas. — v.  8,  reports  to  Colyer  264. 

Curtis,  W.  E. — V.  7,  Navajo  theory  origin  man  65,  legend  of  Hopi 
143. 

Curtis,  Wilbur— V.  3,  80. 

Cusenberry,  Jas. — v.  2,  supt.  of  Vulture  mine  214,  v.  4,  builds  mill 
281. 

Cushing,  F.  H. — v.  7,  desc.  of  habits,  hist,  and  legends  of  Hava- 
supai  95. 

Cushing,  Lt.  Howard  B. — v.  8,  expeds.  against  Indians  101,  114, 
115,  165,  killed  147,  acct.   166. 

Custer,  H. — v.  1,  member  Parke's  party  269. 

Cutler,  Asst.  Adjt.  Gen.  Ben.  C. — v.  3,  report  of  military  opera- 
tions 285. 

Cutler,  Benj.  Clark — v.  2,  appointed  Sec.  of  Ter.  by  Carleton  114. 

Cutler,  Geo. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 

Cutler,  Royal  J. — v.  4,  165,  v.  5,  member  4th  Leg.  2. 


JDaguerra,   A. — v.  6,   216. 

Dalgadito — See  Delgadito. 

Dallam,  Richard— v.   1,  1st  U.  S.  Marshal  in  N.  M.  133. 

Dancing — v.  5,  licensed  by  5th  Leg.  63. 

Daniels — v.  8,   killed  by  Indians   136. 

Dare,  Jno.  T. — v.  5,  2. 
.Darroche,  J.  R. — v.  6,  1st  school  teacher  in  Phoenix  242. 

Date  Creek — v.  8,  res.  estab,  by  Colyer,  abolished  10. 

Davies,  Chas. — v.  6,  92. 

Davis — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians   137. 

Davis,  Alonzo  E. — v.  4,  165. 

Davis,  C.  (Jeff) — v,  5,  alone  attacks  Indians  284,  v.  8,  fight  with 
Indians  103,  member  citizen  exped.  172. 

Davis,  Jas.  W.— v.  6,  92. 

Davis,  Jefferson — v.  1,  said  to  have  introduced  bill  to  form  Ter., 
disproved  326,  importation  of  camels  354,  v.  2,  proclamation 
declaring  Ariz.  Ter.  of  Confederacy  96. 

Davis,  Lt.  Col.  Nelson  H.— v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  282. 

Davis,  Sally  Calvert — v.  2,  wife  of  Chas.  T.  Hayden  290. 

Davis,  Supt. — V.  2,  report  on  condition  Navajo  179. 

Davis,  Ben — v.  6,  early  settler  of  Maryville  234. 

Dawson,  Thos.  F. — v.  5,  writes  Senate  doc.  on  White's  Grand 
Canyon  trip   144. 

Defiance,  Fort — v.  1,  on  Colorado  at  Pilot  Knob  Ti,  235,  near 
Canyon  de  Chelly  309. 

De  Long,  Sidney  R. — v.  2.  asks  military  protection  272,  v.  4,  288, 
V.  5.  58,  291-2,  V.  8,  158. 

Delegate  to  Congress — v.  3,  Governor's  proclamation  for  election 
75,  Poston  elected  87-8,  instructed  by  Leg.  to  secure  arms 
and  mail  route  from  govt.  122-23,  Poston's  activities  in  Con- 
gress 153,  V.  4,  Goodwin  elected  148,  Bashford  elected  164, 
V.  5,  reference  to  election  in  message  to  5th  Leg.  42. 

Delgado,  Felipe — v.  2,  Supt.  Indian  Affairs  178. 

Delgadito,  also  "Dalgadito" — v.  1,  Apache  chief  211,  demands 
restitution  for  killing  of  Apaches  218.  steals  stock  227,  shoot- 
ing by  Wells  229,  killed  by  Mex.  230. 

Dellenbaugh,  F.  S. — v.  5,  brands  Jas.  White's  story  of  trip  through 
Canyon  as  "base  fabrication"  168.  181, 

Del  Pasco  Mine — v.  2,  disc,  by  Jackson  McCracken  265. 

Del-shay — v.  3,  Apache  chief,  stories  by  Mike  Burns  306,  v.  5, 
conference  with  Gen,  Alexander  304. 

15 


Dennis,  Jno.  T. — v.  4,  38,  v.  6,  92,  v.  8,  loses  stock  in  Indian  raid  99. 
Dennison,  Wm. — v.  4,  48. 

Dennison,  Wm.  E. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  135. 
Denslinger,  Jacob — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71. 
Dent,  Fred— V.  4,  320. 

Dent,  Geo.  W. — v.  4,  Supt.  Indian  Affairs  311,  treatment  of  In- 
dians and   Genung  322,   orders    Genung   arrested   325,   v,   5, 

Indian  agt.  for  Ter.  242,  v.  5,  treaty  with  Chemehuevi  244, 

V.  8,  Supt.  Indian  Affairs  2. 
Derby,  Lt. — v.  1,  known  as  John  Phoenix,  on  Colorado  251,  v.  2, 

reconnaissance  to  estab.  route  to  Ft.   Yuma  17. 
De  Ruyther,  Frank — v.  2,  with  Butterfield  stage  line  5, 
Devin,  Gen.  Thos.  E. — v.  5,  exped.  against  Indians  271,  roads  and 

trails  276,  v.  8,  report  for  1868,  23,  59,  commands  south,  mili- 
tary dist.  93. 
Dias,  Mariana — v.  1,  resident  Tucson  348,  desc.  old  Tucson  348. 
Diaz,  Padre — v.  1,  killed  by  Yuma  72. 
Diaz,  Juan — v.  1,  resident  Tucson  349. 
Diaz,  Capt.  Melchior — v.  1,  advance  of  Coronado's  exped.  17,  to. 

Village  of  Hearts  19,  search  for  Alarcon  to  Colorado  river  20, 

death  21. 
Dietrich,  Daniel — v.  6,  205. 
Dickinson,  I.  L. — v.  5,  153. 
Dickson,  Jno. — v.  8,  attacked  by  Indians  131. 
Dickson,  Jno.  H. — v.  2,  with  Walker  party  242,  v.  3,  marries  Mary 

J.  Ehle,  reported  1st  marriage  in  Prescott  211,  v.  4,  settler  in 

Skull  valley  250,  269. 
Divorce — v.  4,  2d  Leg.  gives  courts  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  159, 

Congressional  legislation  202. 
Dobbins,  Cal. — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  311. 

Dobbins,  Marcus  D. — v.  4,  165,  v.  6,  speaker  6th  Leg.  124,  125. 
Dodd,  Henry  Wood — v.  6,  bio.  275,  v.  8,  prospecting  trip  33,  66. 
Dodson,  Berry — v.  3,  34. 

Dodt,  Helenas — v.  8,  Agt.  Colorado  river  res.  5. 
Doll.  Peter— V.  4.  149.  264. 
Dolores,  Neuestra  Senora  de  Los — see  Neustra,  Senora  de  Los 

Dolores. 
Donaldson,  Thos. — v.  6,  legends  of  Hopi   149. 
Doniphan,   Col.   Alex — v.    1,   Mex.   campaign   129,   prepares   code 

for  N.  M.  133,  sent  to  capture  Chihuahua  134.  exped.  against 

Navajo  306,  v.  7,  38. 
Donnelly,  Geo.  W. — v.  6,  92. 

Doran,  A.  J. — v.  4,  117,  v.  5,  experiences  with  Pah-Ute  330. 
Dorantes.  Andres — v.  1,  with  Cabeza  de  Vaca  1. 
Dorce,  Richard — v.  5,  wounded  by  Indians  319. 
Dorgan,  P. — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  134. 

Dorman,  C.  M. — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  316,  v.  3,  80,  in  Prescott  193. 
Doss — V.  2,  early  owner  Mowry  mine  68. 
Douglas — V.  1,  early  owner  in  Patagonia  mine  292. 
Douglas,  Jimmy — v.  4,  assists  in  reforming  Tucson  254-5. 
Douglass,  Col.  J.  W. — v.  2.  early  owner  in  Mowry  mine  68. 
Douglass,  Jas.  S. — v.  4,  165. 
Dowlin,  Lt.  Paul — v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  285. 
Drachman,  Philip — v.  5,  member  4th  Leg.  2,  bio.  31. 
Drachman,  Mose — v.  5,  32. 
Drachman,  Samuel  Arizona — v.  5,  32. 
Dudley,  Supt.  L.  E. — v.  8,  endeavors  to  have  Chiricahua  removed 

15. 
Dudley,  Gen.   N.  A.  M.— v.  8.   command  at  McDowell   192,   256, 

reports  to  Colyer  259,  270. 

16 


Duel — V.  1,  between  Cross  and  Mowry  352. 

Duff,  Jno. — V.  4,  mail  carrier,  rescues  Dave  King  67.     • 

Duffield,  Milton  B.— v.  2,  1st  Marshal  of  Ter.  325,  v.  4,  52,  record 

166,  trial  for  carrying  concealed  weapons  172-3. 
Dumont,  William — v.  6,  1st  postmaster  at  Adamsville  46. 
Dun,  John — v.  8,  presents  rifle  to  Genung  193. 
Dunbar,  E.  E. — v.  1,  director  Ariz.  Mining  &  Trading  Co.  278,  v. 

2,  3. 
Dunn,  A.  G. — v.  3,  shot   in   Prescott  36-7,  v.  8,  cattle  stolen  by 

Indians    134. 
Dunn,  Albert — v.  2,  with  Walker  party  242. 
Dunn,  Jno.  C. — v.  3,  sergt.  at  arms  in  1st  Leg.  94. 
Dunn,  Thos.  E. — v.  2,  Indian  Agt.  for  Mohave  194. 
Dunn,   Capt.   Thos.   S.— v.   8,   230. 

Dunne,  Patrick  H. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  89,  v.  4,  149. 
Duppa,  Brian  P.  D.   (Darrell) — v.  2,  suggests  name  of  Phoenix 

253,  V.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71,  names  Phoenix  74,  desc. 

and  bio.  74,  death  78-9. 
Duran,  Padre — v.  1,  deserts  Onate  Zl . 
Duvall— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 
Dwyer,  Capt.  Philip— v.  8,  death  32L 
Dye,  Joe — v.  2,  assists  Woolsey  in  "Pinole  Treaty"  219. 

E 
Eagle  Mining  Company — v.  2,  71. 
East   Phoenix — See    Mill    City. 

Eaton,  Lt.  Geo.  O. — v.  8,  takes  Indians  to  San  Carlos  res.  13. 
Ebstein,  Lt.  F.  H.  E. — v.  8,  charge  of  Date  Creek  res.  10. 
Education — v.  3,  report  to  1st  Leg.  123-4,  v.  4,  memorial  asking 

for  agricultural  and   mechanical   colleges   162,  v.   5,   ^IcCor- 

mick's  message  to  5th  Leg.  41. 
Education — See  also  Schools. 
Ehle,  Jos. — V.  3,  early  settler  in  Prescott  207,  bio.  207,  wife  207, 

oldest  Mason  in  world  207-8,  funeral  notice  210,  v.  4,  in  Skull 

valley  250. 
Ehle,  Mary  J. — v.  3,  marries  Jno.  Dickson,  reported  1st  marriage 

in  Prescott  211,  v.  4,  269. 
Ehrenberg — v.   2,   townsite   laid  out  by   Michael   Goldwater  287, 

V.  3,  1st  name  Mineral  City  152,  ferry  153,  v.  4,  256. 
Ehrenberg,  Hermann — v.  1,  forms  Sonora  Explor.  &  Mining  Co. 

279,  engineer  280,  v.   2,   Pres.   Cahuabi   Mining   Co.  73,  bio. 

192,  V.  3,  153,  V.  4,  59,  v.  8,  agt.  on  Colorado  river  res.  5. 
El  Dorado  Canyon — v.  4,  13. 

Elections— V.  3,  1st  in  Ter.  87,  v.  4,  1st  "regular"  148.  2d  164. 
Elger,  Col.— v.  8,  64. 
Elias,    Jesus    Maria — v.    2,    guide    to    Tidball    in    exped.    against 

Apache  155,  in  Camp  Grant  massacre  273,  v.  3.  member  1st 

Leg.  90.  V.  5.  member  5th   Leg.  34,  v.  8,  plans  Camp  Grant 

expedition   158. 
Elias.  Juan — v.  6,  124,  v.  8,  herds  stolen  by  Indians  147. 
Elias.  Miguel — v.  4,  in  Ariz.  Vol.  106. 
Elliott — v.  4,  in  Verde  valley  234. 
Elliott,  Andrew   H.— v.  4.    184. 
Elliott,  Jas.  McC— V.  6,  92,   133. 
Elliott,  R.  M.— V.  6,  92. 
Elliott.  Wm.  K.— V.  6.  92. 
Ellis,   Daniel— V.  4,   149,   165. 
El   Moro — Inscription   Rock — v.    1,  6. 
El   Paso   del   Norte — v.   1.   reached  by   Onate   39.    mentioned   by 

Pike  83. 

17 


Emory,  Maj.  W.  H. — v.  1,  succeeds  Bartlett  as  Boundary  Survey 

Comr.'  187,  v.  5,  desc.  Apache  226. 
Empire  Mining  Co. — v,  2,  71. 
Erwin,   A.   M. — v.   5,   member   elect  5th    Leg.,   killed  by   Indians 

300,  V.  8,  136. 
Escobar,  Padre — v.  1,  with  Onate's  exped.  48. 
Espejo,  Antonio  de — v.    1,   search   for   Franciscans   28,  route  28, 

disc,    mines   29. 
Espeleta,  Jose — v.  1,  Franciscan  in  charge  Agustin  de  Santa  Maria 

55. 
Espinosa,  Antonio — v.  4,  308. 
Esquinay — v.  2,   war   chief   Chiricahua   Apache,  killed  by   Nachis 

239. 
Esquivel,  Francisco  de — v.  1,  comisario  with  Onate  35. 
Estevan — v.    1;   negro   slave   of   Dorantes,   companion   of   Cabeza 

de  Vaca  1,  with  Marco  de  Niza  8,  sent  in  advance  of  exped. 

11,  killed  12. 
Etchells,   Chas.  T.— v.  4,   129. 
Eureka  District — v.  2,  early  mining  292,  v.  4,  9. 
Evans,  Lt. — v.  2,  43. 
Evans,  Maj.  Gen. — v.  2,  207. 
Evarts — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 
Ewell,  Capt.  R.  S. — v,  1,  with  1st  Dragoons  in  Santa  Cruz  valley 

288,   owner   in    Patagonia   mine   292,  v.  2,   owner   in   Mowry 

mine  68. 
Ewing,  Thos. — v.  5,  guides  Sanford's  exped,  against  Apache  197, 

V,  6,   1st  postmaster  at   Florence  58. 
Explorations — v.  2,  Ives  17,  20,  Derby  17,  Sitgreaves  17,  Whipple 

18,  Dellenbaugh  on  Mormon  24. 
Explorations  and  Explorers — v.  1,  early  80,  Pike  81,  Becknell  88, 

Cooper   88,    Marmaduke   89.    Smith   94,    98,    Patties   94.    Bill 

Williams  94,   102,   Felix  Aubrey  94,  99,  Pauline  Weaver  94, 

Kit  Carson  94,  Wm.  Wolfskill  99. 
Explorations  and  Surveys — v.   1,   Boundary  Commission   Survey 

183,  Beale  256,  Sitgreaves  264,  aprop,  by  Congress  265,  Parke 

269,  Aubrey  353,  v.  8,  Wheeler  86. 

F 

Fagan — v,  4,  ready  wit  secures  light  sentence  211,  212. 

Farfan,  Capt. — v,  1,  member  Onate  exped.  38. 

Farley,  Tom — v.  6,  restaurant  keeper  in  E.  Phoenix  100, 

Farley,  Wm. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  135. 

Farrington,  Rufus  E. — v,  2,  pioneer  miner  249,  263,  v.  3,  33. 

Faulkner,  A.— v.  6,  91. 

Favorite,  Jim — v.  6,  killed  in  quarrel  over  sheriff's  office  101. 

Fenter,  Minnie — v.  6,  claimed  to  be  1st  American  born  in  Phoe- 
nix 225. 

Fenter,  Wm.  D.— v.  6,  92. 

Fenton,  P. — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  143. 

Ferguson,  Sergt.  B.  F, — v,  3,  fight  with  Indians  284. 

Ferra,  Juan — v.  2,  disc.   Ferra  Gulch  294. 

Ferries — v.  1,  1st  across  Colorado  234,  others  235,  v.  3,  1st  Leg. 
grants  across  Colorado  to  Wm.  Bradshaw  135,  at  Hardyville 
152.  at  Ehrenberg  153,  v.  4,  across  Colorado  river  at  Mohave, 
La  Paz  and  Yuma  12,  v.  5,  41. 

Fewkes,  J.  Walter — v.  7,  sacred  fires  of  Hopi  165,  Pima  legends 
regarding  Casa  Grande  239. 

Fields,  A.  W.— V.  6,  88. 

Figueroa,  Jose — v.  1,  Franciscan  in  charge  of  mission  at  Aguatuvi 
(Awatobi)  55. 

18 


iMiie,  Jas.— V.  3,  34-5,  v.  4,  in  Williamson  valley  250,  v.  5,  339. 

I'lnkler — v.  2,  introduces  placer  dry  washing  machines  296. 

Finnerty,  Wesley — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Finney,  Frank — v.  2,  member  W'alker  party  243. 

Fish,  G.  N. — V.  4,  buys  flour  mill  in  Tucson  255,  267,  v.  6,  50,  232. 

Fish,  Jos. — V.  3,  desc.  early  Prescott  214-15. 

Fisher,  Henry  W. — v.  5,  mail  carrier,  killed  by  Indians  288-9-. 

Fitzgerald,  Henry— v.  6,  268-9. 

Fitzgerald,  J.  H.— v.  6,  124,  suicide  at  Mill  City  136. 

iMtzpatrick,  Mrs.  Alabama — v.  6,  early  teacher  in  Phoenix  249, 
marriage  to  Jno.  Montgomery  252. 

Flag — V.  1,  American  raised  at  Tucson  by  U.  S.  Dragoons  344, 
1st,  raised  by  W.  H.  Kirkland  345. 

Flake,  W.  J. — v,  6,  buys  land  from  Jas.  H.  Stinson  on  Silver  Creek 
280. 

Fleury,  Henry  W. — v.  3,  chaplain  1st  Leg.  94-5,  private  sec.  to 
Gov.  116,  occupant  gubernatorial  mansion  202,  v.  5,  349. 

Florence — v.  6,  settlement  46,  1st  house  built  by  Levi  Ruggles  48, 
1st  store  opened  by  Jos.  CoUingwood  49,  1st  postmaster  58, 
residents  exterminate  band  of  Apaches  62-3,  naming  by  Tru- 
man for  sister  of  McCormick  113. 

Florida   Mine — v.   2,  71. 

Flouring  Mill^— v.  1,  1st  in  Ter.  estab.  by  Sol.  Warner  346,  v.  4,  in 
Tucson  255,  v.  6,  at  Mill  City  98,  Phoenix  98,  number  in 
Ter.  228-9. 

Flower,  W.  T. — v.  5,  Leg.  Com.  criticises  appointment  as  Adj. 
Gen.  23. 

Flynn,    Corp.— v.   8,    178. 

Foley — V.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  148. 

Foote,  Jos.  Warren — v.  4,  Mormon  leader  on  Muddy  275. 

Forbes — v.  1,  member  party  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  332. 
V.  3,  early  resident  Prescott  192. 

Forbes,  Dr. — v.  6,  early  resident  of  Phoenix  195-6. 

Ford,  Lt— V.  4,  in  Ariz.  Vol.  109. 

Ford,  G. — V.  8,  Indian  Agt.  San  Carlos  17. 

Ford,  Wm.  H.— v.  4,  184. 

Ford,   Wm.   W.— v.   6,  93. 

Foreman,  S.  W. — v.  5,  1st  survey  of  Tucson  327. 

Forest,  Wm. — v.  4,  supervisor  Mohave  county  157. 

Forsee,  Geo.  W.— v.  6,  91-2. 

Fort  Apache — v.  8,  Vincent  Colyer  estab.  res.  16,  1st  known  as 
Camp  Ord  95,  v.  2,  estab.  by  Carleton  121,  fight  at  with 
Apaches  154,  v.  4,  condemned  by  Bennett  122,  v.  5,  desc,  by 
Bell  102,  in  Mason's  report  184,  conditions  desc.  by  Hunter, 
commander  killed  by  Indians  286. 

Fort  Breckenridge — v.  1,  estab.  322,  v.  2,  56,  renamed,  abandoned 
88,  V.  5,  Mason's  report,  name  changed  to  Ft.  Grant  188. 

Fort  Buchanan — v.  1,  estab.  321,  v,  2,  abandoned  and  destroyed 
61.  reoccupied  by  Cal.  Column  88,  v.  5,  Mason's  report  185. 

Fort  Goodwin — v.  5,  Mason's  report  184. 

Fort  Grant — v.  5,  formerly  Ft.  Breckenridge,  Mason's  report  188. 

Fort  McDowell— v.  4,  estab.  138,  v.  5,  Mason's  report  185,  231. 

Fort  McLane — v.  2,  where  Mangas  Coloradas  was  killed  144. 

Fort  Mason — v.   1,   58. 

Fort  Misery — v.  3,  building  1st  occupied  as  store  by  Manuel 
Yesera  at  Prescott  196,  surveys  of  town  started  from  206,  oc- 
cupied by  Judge  H.  Howard,   1st  court  held  206. 

Fort  Mohave— V.  1,  estab.  322,  v.  2,  50,  v.  4,  12,  v.  5,  Mason's 
report  184,  v.  6,  42. 

Fort  Stanford — See  Ft.  Breckenridge. 

19 


Fort  Whipple — v.  3,  estab.  31,  removal  32,  arrival  gubernatorial 

party  65,  v.  2,  1st  location,  changed  250,  v.  5,  Mason's  report 

184,  v.  6,  39,  40. 
Fort  Yuma — v.  1,  estab.  237,  v.  4,  ferry  across  Colorado  river  12, 

v.  5,  Mason's  report  184. 
Foster — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians   138. 
Foster,  Billy — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 
Foster,  Jno. — v,  6,  304. 

Foster,  Mac — v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215. 
Fourr,  Wm.— v.  2,  222,  v.  3,  278,  v.  8,  26. 
Fonts,  J.  E.— V.  6,  91. 
Fowler,  W.  L.— v.  6,  124. 
Frame,  Geo. — v.  4,  mail  carrier  56. 

Francisco — v.  2,  head  of  Papagos  in  Camp  Grant  massacre  274. 
Franciscans — v.  1,  ten  with  Onate  38,  in  Ariz.  67,  70,  in  Cal.  120. 
Franklin,  C.  A. — v.  3.  34,  see  also  Banta.  A.  F. 
Franklin,  Mrs.  Laura  B. — v.  6,  marriage  Jno.  J.  Gardiner  192. 
Fraternal  Orders — v.  6,  Masonic  and  Odd  Fellows  227. 
Frazier,  Geo.  M. — v.  2,  appointed  marshal  by  Baylor  of  Confed. 

forces  85. 
Free,  Mickey — v.  2,  one  cause  of  ill   treatment  of  Cochise,  and 

enmity  to  whites  31. 
Freeman — v.  4,  fights  Indians  in  Skull  valley  132-33. 
Freighters — v.  6,  216. 
Fremont,  Jno.  C. — v.  1,  105,  meets  Kit  Carson  107,  Cal.  campaign 

123,   succeeds  Weller  as   Bound.  Comr.,  succeeded  by   Bart- 

lett  183,  V.  4,  incorporator  Atlantic  &  Pac.  R.  R.  199. 
French,  A. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 
French,  A.  H.— v.  3,  13,  14. 
French,  Chief  Justice — v.  3,  202. 
French,  S.  M.— v.  6,  180. 
Fronteras,  Presidio — v.   1,   changed  68. 
Fruiter,  W.  D.— v.  6,  180. 
Fudge,    Jno. — v.    4,    in    charge    Colorado    river    Indian    res.    325, 

ordered    to    arrest    Genung    325,    v.    8,    Agt.    Colorado    river 

Indian    res.    5. 
Fuson,  Geo.  W. — v.  6,  93. 
Fye,  Jos. — See  Phy,  Jos. 

G 

Gabriel,  Pete— v.  4,  kills  Joe  Phy  135. 

Gadsden,  Jas. — v.  1,  U.  S.  Minister  to  Mex.  189. 

Gadsden  Purchase — v.  1,  cession  of  Ter.  to  U.  S.  186,  hist.  188, 
text  of  treaty  190,  possession  by  U.  S.  321. 

Gadsonia — v.  1,  name  suggested  for  Arizona  322. 

Gage,  Almon  F.— v.  2.  1st  U.  S.  Dist.  Atty.  325,  v.  3,  Sec.  Council 
1st  Leg.  94,  v.  5,  2. 

Gallatin — See  Glanton. 

Gallego,  Juan — v.  1,  sent  to  New  Spain  by  Coronado  with  mes- 
sage for  Viceroy  20. 

Gallegos,  Manuel — v.  4,  Lt.  Ariz.  Vol.  99. 

Game — v.  4,  in  early  days  85. 

Gandara — v.  8,  shot  by  Americans  203. 

Gandara,  Don  Manuel — v.  1,  Gov.  of  Sonora  141. 

Ganalo,  Louis — v.  4,  308. 

Gantt — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  147. 

Garces,  Padre  Francisco — v.  1,  charge  of  San  Xavier  70,  walls  of 
Tucson  71,  bio.  12,  pilgrimages  72,  founds  Yuma  pueblo  mis- 
sions IZ,  killed  by  Indians  74,  v.  7,  reference  to  Chemehuevi 
314. 

20 


Gardiner,  Jno.  J. — v.  6,  93,  1st  hotel  keeper  at  Phoenix  179,  bio. 
188. 

Gardiner,  Mrs.  Jno.  J. — v.  6,  in  1871  only  American  woman  in 
Phoenix  225. 

Gardner — v.  8,  stock  stolen  by  Indians  140. 

Gardner,  Jas. — v.  4,   129. 

Gardner,  T.  H. — v.  2,  early  owner  in  Empire  mine  71. 

Gardo — v.  2,  Apache  chief  killed  154. 

Garland,  Gen. — v.  1,  succeeds  Sumner  in  command  against  Nav- 
ajo 309. 

Garrett,  Wm.— v.  6,  88. 

Garvin,  Dr.  Jas. — Member  1st  Leg.  90,  1st  Alcalde  197. 

Garvin,  Wm.  H.— v.  4,  Adj.  Gen.  of  Ter.  95,  v.  5,  23. 

Gass,  Octavius  D. — v.  4,  149,  165,  184,  v.  5,  member  4th  Leg.  1, 
Pres.  Council  2,  represents  Mohave  and  Pah-Ute  Co.  in  5th 
Leg.  33. 

Genung,  Chas.  B. — v.  2,  assists  Wickenburg  at  Vulture  mine  213, 
v.  3,  1st  administrator  appointed  by  probate  court  of  Yava- 
pai Co.  247,  V.  4,  bio.  27,  disc.  Montgomery  mine  37,  chases 
murderer  of  Sandy  Hampton  49,  in  charge  of  Colorado  river 
Indian  res.  316,  farming  on  res.  318,  resigns  323,  goes  to  Cal. 
to  buy  horses  for  Indians  324,  loyalty  of  Indians  and  em- 
ployees 328,  V.  8,  organizes  exped.  against  Indians,  belief 
that  Mex.  committed  Wickenburg  massacre  298,  investiga- 
tion of  Wickenburg  massacre  306,  Crook's  attempt  to  capture 
Indians  suspected  309. 

George,  Johnny— v.  6,  183,  97,  bio.  198. 

Geronimo — v.  7,  Apache  creation  myths  19. 

(jibbons,  Andrew  S. — v.  5,  member  5th  Leg.  34. 

Gibbs,  Lt. — v.  4,  in  command  at  Wickenburg  126. 

Gibson,  J.  J. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 

Gibson,  J.  P. — v.  5,  attacked  by  Indians  308-9. 

Gila  Apache — v.  7,  16. 

Gila  City— V.  4,  9. 

Gila  River — v.  1,  8,  19,  reached  by  Onate  49,  by  Padre  Kino  59, 
by  Padres  Keller  and  Sedelmair  61,  disc,  of  gold  placers  by 
Snively  296,  v.  2,  placers  disc,  by  Weaver  184,  219,  v.  4,  disc,  of 
gold  9,  V.  6,  settlements  45. 

Gila  Valley — v.  6,  descr.  by  Rusling  4. 

Giles,  Jas.  S.— v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90,  v.  4,  149,  184,  v.  5,  2. 

Gilmore,  Capt. — v.  4,  thanked  by  3d  Leg.  193. 

Gilmore,  Chaplain — v.  6,  236. 

Gillespie,  Lt.  Archibald — v.  1,  bearer  dispatches  to  Fremont  123. 

Gillett — V.  2,  town  started  253. 

Gilliland,  F.  G. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 

Gilson,  Wm. — v.  8,  informs  Crook  Date  Creek  Indians  committed 
Wickenburg  massacre  303. 

Gimletville — v.  3,  1st  named  Goodwin  35,  205. 

Gird,  R.  W.— v.  4,  311. 

Glanton,  Jno. — v.  1,  manages  Colorado  ferry,  kills  Indians,  killed 
by  Indians  235,  conflicting  accts.  236. 

Glendennin,  Maj.— v.  5,  256,  304. 

Glenn,  R.  H.— v.  1,  early  Dist.  Atty.  326. 

Glover,  Pvt. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Glover,  W.  A. — v.  6,  early  school  teacher  in  Phoenix  245. 

Goldberg  Brothers — v.  6,  194. 

Goldman  Brothers  (Leo,  Adolf  and  Chas.) — v.  6,  203. 

Goldwater,  Barry— v.  2,  288. 

Goldwater,  J.  &  Brother — v.  3,  occupy  building  on  1st  lot  sold  in 
Prescott  193. 

21 


Goldwater,  Joe — v.  4,  264,  v.  6,  207,  attacked  by  Indians  211,  212, 
1st  postmaster  at  Ehrenberg  212. 

Goldwater,  Julius  A.— v.  6,  185,  v.  8,  294. 

Goldwater,  Michael — v.  2,  bio.  286,  v.  6,  207,  attacked  by  Indians 
211,  212. 

Goldwater,  Morris — v.  2,  288,  v.  6,  185,  1st  telegraph  operator 
in  Phoenix  210,  211. 

Goldwater  Brothers — v.  6,  early  merchants  in  Phoenix  207,  246. 

Gomez,  Pancho — v.  8,  cattle  stolen  by  Indians  138. 

Gonzales — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  280. 

Gonzales,  A. — v.  8,  mistaken  for  Indian  by  companions  and 
wounded  144. 

Gonzales,  Inez — v.  1,  captured  by  Indians,  rescue  by  Boundary 
Commission  Survey  201,  statement  205,  return  to  family  207. 

Gonzales,  Philip — v.  8,  guide  for  Vincent  Colyer  218. 

Goodhue,  Geo. — v.  3,  killed  by  Indians  32,  256. 

Goodwin — v.  3,  called  Gimletville  Z2,  205. 

Goodwin,  Camp — See  Fort  Goodwin. 

Goodwin,  Francis  H. — v.  5,  34,  v.  6,  124. 

Goodwin,  Jno.  M. — v.  2,  1st  Gov.  of  Ter.  324,  v.  3,  copy  of  tirst 
proclamation  70,  arrival  at  Ft.  Whipple  31,  selects  town  site 
and  names  Prescott  32,  locates  capital  41,  organizes  Ter.  69, 
tour  through  Ter.  71,  organizes  municipality  at  Tucson  71, 
188,  proclamation  organizing  judicial  dists.  and  assigning 
judges  72,  proclamation  ordering  election  Del.  to  Congress, 
members  Leg.  75,  message  to  1st  Leg.  95,  farewell  message 
127,  incorporator  Ariz.  Ry.  138,  139,  bio.  187,  selects  Prescott 
as  capital,  appoints  Woolsey  Col.  of  militia  189,  Jno.  T.  Alsap 
Treas.  of  Ter.  259,  v.  4,  locates  and  names  Prescott  58,  with 
Mason  on  trip  125,  elected  to  Congress  148,  activities  181, 
raises  companies  of  Pimas  and  Maricopas,  Mexican  com- 
panies at  Tucson  and  Tubac  186. 

Gorham,  Maj. — v.  4,  in  command  at  Ft.  Goodwin  125. 

Goss — V.  2,  disc,  gold  at  Turkey  Creek  212. 

Governor — v.  5,  McCormick  message  to  4th  Leg.  2,  to  5th  Leg. 
34,  McCormick  takes  seat  in  Congress  99,  arrival  of  A.  P.  K. 
Safford  99. 

Governor's  Mansion — v.  3,  erected  at  Prescott  199. 

Gould,  Jack — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 

Grand  Canyon — v.  5,  1st  passage  alleged  by  Jas.  White  122,  Pow- 
ell's 1st  exped.  169,  180,  181,  2d  Powell  exped.  181. 

Cranio,  S. — v.  6,  early  butcher  in  Phoenix  196. 

Graham,  Lt. — v.  8,  exped.  against  Indians  115,  116. 

Granite  Creek — v.  1,  placer  mining  by  Walker  party  298. 

Grant — v.  3,  carries  1st  mail  to  Prescott  36. 

Grant,  Capt. — v.  4,  in  command  at  Date  Creek  126. 

Grant,  Fort — See  Fort  Grant  (Camp). 

Grant,  Jas.— v.  4,  157,  Ter.  Auditor  185,  v.  5,  14.  15.  resigns  57. 
V.  6,  165,  early  stage  prop.  184,  214,  215. 

Grant,  Gen.  U.  S. — v.  4,  resolution  2d  Leg.  161. 

Grassman,  F.  E. — v.  8,  agt  for  Pima  4. 

Gray — v.  2,  partner  Herman   Ehrenberg  193. 

Gray,  Col.  A.  B. — v.  2,  surveys  lands  of  Pima  and  Maricopa  29, 
Supt.  Maricopa  Mining  Co.  72,  surveys  from  Marshall,  Tex., 
to  San  Diego,  Cal.  284,  v.  8,  surveys  res.  for  Pima  and  Mari- 
copa   3. 

Gray,   Chas.   H.— v.  4,  304. 

Gray,  Columbus  H.— v.  6.  93,  133,  bio.  254. 

Gray,  Harrison — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Gray,  Mrs.  Mary  A. — v.  6,  early  days  in  Salt  river  valley  254. 

22 


Gray  &  Co. — v.  4,  early  merchants  in  Prescott  260. 

Grazing — v.  6,   117,  316. 

Greek,  George — v.  1,  camel  attendant  357,  death  364. 

Greeley — v.   8,   killed   by   Indians    134. 

Greeley,  Lewis — v.  2,  nephew  of  Horace  Greeley,  with  Jacob 
Hamblin  on  trip  to  Ariz.  25. 

Green — v.  1,  member  of  exped.  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  331. 

Green — v.  2,  partner  of  Henry  Wickenburg  212. 

Green,  Maj. — v.  8,  117. 

Green,  Private — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  147. 

Green,  Lt.  B.  C. — v.  1,  member  escort  Boundary  Commission 
Survey  203. 

Green,  Col.  Jno. — v.  8,  prefers  charges  against  Barry  for  dis- 
obeying orders  to  massacre  Indians  59,  report  of  Ord  81, 
in  command  at  Camp  Goodwin  93,  estab.  Camp  Ord  94,  95, 
receives  Colyer  221. 

Green,  Joe — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Greenhaw,  Hosea  G. — v.  6,  93. 

Gregg,  Gen. — v.  5,  commended  by  4th  Leg.  18,  experience  with 
Apache  111,  orders  all  Indians  off  res.  treated  as  hostile  242, 
orders  interfered  with  by  Supt.  of  Indian  Affairs  Dent  242, 
order  countermanded  by  McDowell  246,  succeeds  Wallen  in 
N.  Ariz.  298,  exped.  against  Indians  299,  v.  6,  exped.  against 
Indians   37. 

Grejalba,  Juan — v.  8,  cattle  stolen  by  Indians  140. 

Griffin,   Benj.  F.— v.  6,  93. 

Griffin,  Frank — v.  8,  144. 

Griffin,  Martin  P. — v.  6,  93,  supervisor  133,  townsite  comr.  181. 

Griffin,  N.  L.— v.  6,  87. 

Grinnell,  Henry — v.  1,  aids  Lorenzo  Oatman  in  rescue  of  sister 
259. 

Grinnell  &  Co. — v.  6,  at  Maricopa  Wells  65. 

Griner,  Maj. — v.  2,  statement  as  to  difficulties  between  whites  and 
Indians   150. 

Groom,  Robt.  W. — v.  3,  reports  gold  disc,  to  Carleton  4,  guide  to 
exped.  into  Ariz.  27,  story  by  Banta  28,  member  1st  Leg.  89, 
presides  at  meeting  to  select  townsite  of  Prescott  192,  se- 
lected as  comr.  192,  surveys  townsite  207,  v.  4,  44,  58,  149. 

Gross — V.  4,  43. 

Grossman,  Capt.  F.  C. — v.  7.  legends  regarding  Casa  Grande  242. 

Grosvenor.  H.  C. — v.  2,  killed  by  Indians  40,  Supt.  Santa  Rita 
Mining  Co.  72. 

Grover,  Gen. — v.  8,  commands  Campe  Verde  275. 

Grover,  Edwin  W.— v.  6,  93,  231. 

Groves,  Rev.  Alexander — v.  6,  93,  1st  regularly  ordained  preacher 
of  M.  E.  Church  South  for  Ariz.  235,  services  in  Salt  River 
valley  236. 

Growl,  Milton  B.— v.  6.  93. 

Grubb,  C.  H.— v.  6.  231. 

Guadalupe  Plidalgo,  Treaty  of — v.  1,  hist.  149.  ratified  153,  text 
154,  protocol  176,  boundaries  180.  cession  182,  Boundary  Com- 
mission  Survey  not  permanently  estab.   186. 

Guaymas — v.  1.  error,  change  to  Isabel   198. 

Gubernatorial  Party — v.  3,  leaves  Ft.  Larned,  Neb.,  47,  letters  of 
Jonathan  Richmond  47,  renort  gold  fields  by  Pishon  53,  ar- 
rives Navajo  Springs  and  formally  organizes  Ter.  65,  arrives 
Ft.  Whipple  65,  escort,  personnel,  route  68,  reached  Navajo 
Springs  69.  speech  of  McCormick  69,  70,  proclamation  of 
Gov.,  officials  take  oath  of  office  70. 

23 


Guevavi — v.  1,  1st  mission  in  Ariz.,  Padre  Kino  57,  in  charge 
Padre  Grassoffer  61,  Father  Carucho  61,  plundered  by  In- 
dians 62,  re-occupied  62-3,  called  San  Miguel,  San  Rafael, 
Santos  Angeles,  hist.  76,  Padre  Bernave  in  charge,  killed  by 
Indians  76,  disappeared  from  map  76,  v,  7,  298. 

Gurley,  Jno.  A. — v.  2,  appointed  1st  Gov.,  dies  before  taking  office 
324. 

Gutierez,  Andres — v.  7,  missionary  to  Hopi  140. 

Gutierez,  Narcisco — v.  7,  priest  in  charge  San  Xavier  299. 

Guzman,  Nuno  de — v.  1,  governor  of  Nueva  Galicia  14,  abandons 
exped.   15. 

Gwinn,  Sen. — v.  1,  introduces  bill  for  organization  of  Ter.  323, 
failure  324. 

H 

Hadley,   Milton— v.  2,  260. 

Hadley,  Milton  S.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Hadsell,  Chas. — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  319. 

Hall — v.  2,  trooper,  killed  by  Indians  153. 

Hall,  Andrew — v.  5,  member  Powell's  1st  exped.  180. 

Halleck,  Gen.  H.  W. — v.  5,  report  203,  military  conditions  in  Ariz. 
1868,  261,  298,  v.  8,  relieved  of  command  of  division  of  Pa- 
cific by  Thomas  21. 

Halstead — v.  2,  disc.  Colorado  river  copper  mine  74,  owner  in  gold 
mine  on  Colorado  river  76, 

Halstead,  Jas.  A, — v.  3,  appointed  to  appraise  lots  in  Prescott  193. 

Halstead,  Richard— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  138. 

Hamblin,  Jacob — v.  2,  sent  by  Brigham  Young  to  make  explora- 
tions 24,  other  trips  25,  v.  5,  diplomat  of  Mormon  church 
328,  desc.  by  Powell  329. 

Hand,  T.  E.— v.  3,  1st  editor  Arizona  Miner  31,  46,  death  194. 

Hamilton,  D— v.  6,  91. 

Hamilton,  M.  H.— v.  6,  180. 

Hampton,  Sandy — v.  4,  46,  murdered  48. 

Hance,  Jno. — v.  5,  333. 

Hancock,  Carrie — v.  6,  early  school  teacher  in  Tempe  and  Phoe- 
nix 249. 

Hancock,  W.  A.— v.  4,  2d  Lt.  Ariz.  Vol.  96,  at  E.  Phoenix  100,  1st 
sheriff  Maricopa  Co.  102,  133,  surveys  Phoenix  132,  erects  1st 
store  134,  171,  early  lawyer  139,  213,  succeeds  Jno,  M.  Olvaney 
as  postmaster  221,  bio.  270-1. 

Hand,  T.  E,— v.  3,  1st  editor  Arizona  Miner  31-46,  death  194. 

Hanford,  D.  W. — v,  5,  elected  4th  Leg.  2. 

Hank'N'Yank — v.  2,  Hank  Hewitt  and  Jno.  Bartlett,  characters  in 
old  Tucson  118. 

Hanna — v.  8,  wagon  train  destroyed  by  Indians  103-4,  killed  by 
Indians  146. 

Hanover  Copper  Mine — v.  2,  16. 

Harcuver  Copper  Mines — v.  2,  193. 

Harding,  Col. — v,  2.  member  Walker  party  242, 

Hardy,  Capt.  W,  H.— v,  3,  estab,  Hardyville  152,  253,  v.  4,  1Z, 
early  experiences  74,  81-88,  149,  165,  259,  280,  v.  5,  member 
4th  Leg.  1,  confirms  statements  of  las.  White  141,  experience 
with  Walapai  330,  v.  4,  12,  v.  6,  desc.  by  Rusling  41. 

Hargrave.  Capt. — v.  2,  command  troops  estab,  post  in  Chino  val- 
ley 250.  v.  3,  31. 

Hargrave,  Eli  Taylor— v.  6,  93.  196. 

Hargrave,  Jno.  P. — v,  3,  early  lawyer  in  Prescott  249. 

Harrover,  Capt.  B.  F. — v.  2,  in  fight  with  Apache  at  Ft.  Bowie  154. 

Harrington— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129,  149. 

24 


Harris,  Jno.  C. — v.  6,  pioneer  of  Florence  55. 

Harris,  W.  H.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  148. 

Harris   Mine— v.  2,  75. 

Harrison,  Samuel — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  127. 

Hart — V.  1,  member  exped,  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  332. 

Hart,  H,  L. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Hartley,  Maj. — v.  1,  director  in  Sonora  Alining  &  Exploring  Co. 

280. 
Harts,  Gregory  P. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90. 
Hartshorn — v.  2,  owner  in  Colorado  river  copper  mine  74. 
Hartt,  J.  B.— V.  6,  120. 

Haskell,  Thales — v.  7,  member  Mormon  exped.  to  Hopi  145. 
Hasson,  Lt. — v.  8,  scout  against  Indians  24. 
Hatch,  Ira — v,  7,  member  Mormon  exped.  to  Hopi  145. 
Hatch,  Capt.  Jno.  P. — v.  1,  commands  exped.  against  Navajo  314. 
Hathaway,  Guilford — v.  4,  65. 

Hatz,  Daniel — v.  8,  house  burned  by  Indians  150. 
Havasupai — v.  5,   treatment   of  Jas.   White   in   Canyon    159,    182, 

v.  7,  hist.,  legends,  etc.,  93. 
Hawaikuh — v.  1,  13. 

Hawkins,  W.  Rhodes — v.  5,  member  Powell's  1st  exped.  180. 
Hay— V.   1,  228. 
Hay,  Lt.— V.  8,  323. 
Hayden,  Carl — v.  2,  son  of  Chas.  T.  Hayden  and  1st  State  Rep. 

in  Congress  290. 
Hayden,  Chas.  T. — v.  1,  aids  party  organized  at  Tucson  to  join 
Crabb  in  Mex.  342,  v.  2,  train  attacked  by  Apaches  154,  bio. 
288,  V.  3,  79,  v.  6,  organizer  in   Hayden   Milling  and   Farm- 
ing Ditch  Co.  88,  founder  of  Tempe  103-4,  probate  judge  in 
Tucson  104,  constructs  flouring  mill  at  Tempe  220-1. 
Hayden  Milling  and  Farming  Ditch  Co. — v.  6,  water  approp.  88. 
Hayden's  Ferry — v.  2,  1st  name  of  Tempe  289,  see  also  Tempe. 
Hays,  Tom  C— v.  6,  180. 
Hayward,  Chas. — v.  1,  member  Ariz.  Mining  &  Trading  Co.  party 

278. 
Hazeltine,  W.  E.— v.  4,  270. 

Heerman,  Dr.  A.  L. — v.   1,  member   Parke  party  269. 
Heintzelman,  Gen.  S.  P. — v.  1,  estab.  mil.  post  at  Colorado  ferry 
237,  subdues  Yumas  250,  Pres,  Sonora  Mining  &  Exploring 
Co.  280,  V.  2,  Pres.  and  Supt.  of  Heintzelman  mine  16,  aids 
in  organization  of  Ter.  321, 
Heintzelman  Mine — v.  1,  disc.  287,  1st  ore  288,  1st  machinery  in 
Ariz.  289,  descr.  by  Mowrv  289,  v.  2,  products  16,  abandoned 
60,   descr.   72. 
Hellings.  E.  E.— v.  6.  91,  94. 
Hellings,  Wm.  B.— v.  6,  93. 
Hellings,  Wm.  B.  &  Co. — v.  6,  erect  flouring  mill  at  Mill  City  98, 

119,  121,  V.  8,  train  attacked  by  Indians  143. 
Hellings    &   Veil— V.   6.    232. 

Henderson,  D.  &  Co. — v.  3,  early  merchants  in  Prescott  213. 
Henderson,  Geo. — v.  4,  305. 
Henderson,  J.   M. — v.  6,  91. 
Hendley,    Lt.— v.   2,   238. 

Heninger,  Wm.  K. — v.  4,  149.  • 

Henion,  Jno. — v.  5,  elected  4th  Leg.  2,  did  not  attend  2. 
Henning.  Abraham — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  148. 
Henry,  Arthur  M. — v.  2,  recorder  of  Weaver  mining  dist.  304. 
Henry,   Fred — v.  4,  Indian   fight  in  Skull  valley  133,  Battle   Flat 

fight  136. 
Henry,  Col.  Guy  V. — v.  8,  orders  attack  on  Indians  224. 

25 


Henson — v.  3,  kills  Apaches  33,  35. 

Herbert,  T.  P. — v.  2,  owner  in  Jackson  quartz  vein  75. 

Hernandez,  Vincent — v.  8,  murdered  205. 

Herrera,  Sergt.  Andres — v.  2,  with  Carson   in  campaign  against 

Navajo  170. 
Herron,  Samuel — v.  4,  in  Battle  Flat  tight  136. 
Hewitt,  Hank — See  Hank'N'Yank. 
Hewitt,  Henry— V.  8,  305. 

Heydenfeldt,  Judge — v.  1,  in  Crabb  exped.  into  Mex.  330.- 
Heyne,  C.  R. — v.  6,  1st  assayer  in  Phoenix  215. 
Hickey,  Philip  K.— v.  6,  226. 

Higgins — V.  2,  156,  member  Butterworth  party  156. 
Higgins,  Frank — v.  2,  appointed  dist.  judge  by  Baylor  (Confed.) 

85. 
Higgins,  Norman  S. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90. 
Highways  and  Streets — v.  5,  act  passed  by  5th  Leg.  64. 
Hi  Jolly— v.  1,  camel  attendant  357,  364,  v.  8,  190. 
Hildebrand,  C.   M.— v.  6,  94,   110. 
Hill,  Jno.— v.  6,  94. 

Hinds  &  Hooker — v.  8,  herds  attacked  by  Indians  146,  147. 
Hines — v.  4,  reclamation  near  Ft.  Thomas  276. 
Hinton,  Francis  J. — v.  2,  estab.  store  at  Arizona  City  190,  v.  3,  80, 

V.  4,  in  firm  of  Geo.  F.  Hooper  &  Co.  264,  v.  8,  agt.  for  the 

Yuma  4. 
Historical  Society — See  Arizona  Historical  Society. 
Hitchcock — V.  3,  pioneer  merchant  of  Prescott  213. 
Hoague,   Thos.   J.   L.    (John) — v.   6,    member   Swilling   party   71, 

1st  notary  public  in  Phoenix  82. 
Hodges,   Francis   M. — v.  5,  2. 
Hodges,  Thos.— v.  3,  196,  v.  4,  184. 
Hoffman,  Col. — v.  2,  subjugates  the  Mohave  56. 
Holaday,  C.  M.— v.  3,  78,  member  1st  Leg.  90. 
Holcomb,  Jas.  P.  (Pete) — v.  6,  94,  1st  butcher  in  Phoenix  196. 
Holcomb,   Wm.— V.  4,  59. 

Holcomb  &  Murray — v.  8,  cattle  stolen  by  Indians  145. 
Holland,  David — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  141. 
Holland,  Pat — v.  6,  early  settler  of  Florence  52. 
Holliday,  Ben — v.  2,  purchases  Butterfield  stage  line  16. 
Hollister — v.  3,  owner  in  Prescott  House  36. 
Holmes,  Geo.  W.— v.  6,  94. 
Holmes,  Wm.  A.  (Hunkydory) — v.  6,  94. 
Flomestead   Land — v.  4,    1st  application  made   by  Jno.   B.  Allen 

covering  Maricopa  Wells  308-9. 
Honorato,  Padre — v.  1,  companion  Marcos  de  Niza  8,  left  behind, 

ill,   10. 
Hopi — V.  1,  29,  1st  to  submit  to  Spanish  authority,  houses,  dress, 

etc.,  51,  restoration  of  sight  to  blind  Hopi  54,  work  of  priests, 

independence,  protection  to  other  tribes  55,  v.  3,  in  Poston's 

speech   in   Congress    157,    Kit   Carson's   report   158,   v.  4,   21, 

V.  7,  2,  origin  123,  hist.,  legends,  etc.,  138,  Snake  Dance  169, 

V.  8,  res.  6. 
Hopi  Villages — v.  1,  visited  by  Espejo  28,  by  Onate  48. 
Hooper,   Geo. — v.   2,   owner   in   Colorado    river   copper   mine   74, 

V.  3,  early  merchant  78,  v.  4,  264,  v.  6,  at  Maricopa  Wells  65. 
Hooper,  Jos.  H. — v.  5,  elected  to  5th  Leg.  from  Yuma  Co.  33. 
Hooper,  Wm.  B.— v.  3,  252. 
Hooper,  Wm.  B.  &  Co.— v.  6,  226. 
Hooper,  Whiting  &  Co. — v.  5,  merchants  328. 
Hopkins,  D.  G.  W. — v.  2,  early  owner  Empire  mine  71,  engineer 

Maricopa  Mining  Co.  12,  v.  3,  228,  234. 

26 


Hopkins,  Francis  A. — v.  4,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Hopkins,  Gilbert  W. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90,  v.  8,  killed  by 
Indians    135. 

Hopkins,  J.  W, — v.  2,  on  committee  to  Stoneman  272,  v.  8,^158. 

Hoppin,  Judge — v.  2,  owner  in  Harris  mine  75. 

Horner,  Chas. — v,  3,  early  business  man  of  Yuma  252. 

Horner,   Chris. — v.  4,  307. 

Horton,  W.   B.— v.  7,  12. 

Houghton,  Joab — v.  1,  one  of  1st  /\merican  judges  in  N.  M.  133. 

Houston,  Theodore — v.  1,  killed  by  Indians  276. 

Howard,  Gila — v.  1,  1st  American  child  born  in  Ariz.  234. 

Howard.  John — v.  3,  early  lawyer  in  Prescott  213,  249,  v.  4,  211, 
212,  V.  8,  194. 

Howard,  Dr.  Jno.  R.— v.  4,  27-8. 

Howard,  Gen.  O.  O. — v.  2,  comr.  in  treaty  with  Cochise  230,  v.  8, 
abolishes  res.  at  Date  Creek  10. 

Howell,  B.  R— V.  3,  79. 

Howell,  Jno. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Howell,  Wm.  T. — v.  2,  early  judge  of  Ter.  325,  v.  3,  assigned  to 
1st  dist.  74,  appointed  comr.  to  draw  up  code  117,  141,  letters 
concerning  mining  148,  resigns  246,  v.  4,  death  212. 

Howell  Code^— V.  3,  adopted  by  1st  Leg.  92,  divides  Ter.  into  4 
counties  93,  117. 

Hualpi — See  Walapai. 

Hubbard,  Lt.— v.  5,  at  Ft.  Bowie  102. 

Hubbell,  J.  Lorenzo — v.  6,  reminiscences  281. 

Hubbell,  Santiago — v.  1,  brings  supplies  to  Heintzelman  mine 
and  takes  1st  ore  288. 

Hughes — V.  8,  ranch  attacked  by  Indians  146. 

Hughes,  Fred  C. — v.  3,  expeds.  into  gold  fields  40. 

Hughes,  James — v.  2,  connected  with  Butterfield  stage  line,  killed 
by  Mex.  5. 

Hughes,  Samuel — v.  1,  resident  Tucson  345,  v.  2,  pioneer,  bio.  210. 

Hughes,  Wilbur— V.  8,  321. 

Humphreys,  Gen.  A.  A. — v.  8,  86, 

Hunt,  J.  L.— V.  6,  246. 

Hunter,  Capt. — v.  2,  takes  Tucson  for  Confederacy  87,  retreats 
88,  report  92.  arrests  White  for  purchasing  supplies  from 
Yankees  93,  94. 

Hunter,  Thomas  Thompson — v.  5,  attitude  of  Indians  in  1867-8 
285,  V.  6,  bio.  260,  early  days  in  Salt  River  valley  260,  men- 
tions Indians  eating  caterpillars  263. 

Hutchings,  Chas. — v.  4,  311. 

Hutton,  N.  H. — v.  1,  member  Whipple's  party  266,  member 
Parke's  2d  exped.  269,  v.  2,  contracts  to  open  wagon  road 
across  Ariz.  2,  discovers  killed  and  wounded  employees  But- 
terfield   stage    line   9. 

Hutton,  Oscar — v.  4,  2d  Lt.  in  Ariz.  Vol.  96,  report  activities 
against  Indians  112,  120,  v.  8,  recommended  for  conduct  on 
exped.  against  Indians  115,  testifies  in  behalf  Indians  at 
massacre  at  Camp   Grant  242,  243. 

Hutton,    Thos. — v.  4,    163. 

I 
lager — See   Jaeger. 
Ilges,  Col.— V.  5,  208. 
Tllarregui,    lose  Salazar   (Yllarregui) — v.   1.  Boundary  Comr.  for 

^lex.   r90. 
Immaculate  Conception — v.  1.  mission  near  Yuma  57. 
Indian  Agents — v.  8.  steal  from  Indians  11. 

27 


Indian  Reservations — v.  3,  Goodwin's  message  113,  no  approp. 
made  144,  report  on  Colorado  rive/  res.  168,  opposed  by  War 
Dept.  184,  185,  set  aside  by  Congress  186,  v.  4,  on  Colorado 
river  21,  Iretaba  tribe  of  Mohaves  121,  2d  Leg,  asks  Congress 
for  res.  on  lower  Gila  162,  Genung's  story  of  Colorado  river 
res.  310,  323,  325,  328,  331,  332,  Yavapai  and  Mohave  315, 
irrigation  and  farming  begun  318,  arrival  of  Apaches  320, 
V.  5,  need  mentioned  by  McCormick  7,  only  one  in  Ariz.  7, 
approp.  for  improvement  on  Colorado  river  res.  refused  by 
Congress  88,  v.  6,  Pima  and  Maricopa  descr.  by  Rusling  8, 
V.  8,  Pima  and  Maricopa  3,  Yuma  4,  Colorado  river  5,  Hopi, 
Mohave  6,  Walapai  8,  Date  Creek  10,  Chiricahua  14,  Camp 
McDowell,  Camp  Grant,  Ft.  Apache,  White  Mountain  16, 
San  Carlos  16,  Camp  Apache  221. 

Indian  Ring — v.  8,  operations  10,  11,  methods  98. 

Indian    Schools — v.    7,   238. 

Indians — v.  2,  outrages  against  whites,  troubles  between  tribes 
26-163,  V.  3,  Navajos  attack  exped.  sent  to  estab.  Ft.  Whipple 
43,  Walapai  make  treaty  45,  escort  of  gubernatorial  party 
attack  Walapai  46,  hght  with  Tonto  Apache  67,  Goodwin's 
message  111,  expeds.  against  113,  Congress  asked  for  approp. 
to  put  Indians  on  res.  142-3,  Poston's  speech  in  Congress  157, 
report  on  Hopi  by  Kit  Carson  157-8,  Poston  descr.  Apache 
159,  mention  of  Pima  and  Maricopa  160,  Papago  161-2. 

V.  2,  tribes  of  the  Colorado  163,  attack  Warner  wagon  train  237, 
killed  in  Yavapai  Co.  253,  murder  and  raids  258,  killed  J,  W. 
Beauchamp  267,  Woolsey's  2d  exped.  273,  official  reports  of 
fights  281,  Indians'  side  of  question  by  Mike  Burns  288. 

V.  4,  Pima  and  Maricopa  in  Gila  valley  16,  friendly  tribes,  res. 
for  Colorado  tribes  21,  Apache  only  hostile  tribe  22,  early 
warfare  75,  86,  cunning  88,  Pima  and  Maricopa  each  com- 
prise company  in  Arizona  vols.  96,  Arizona  vols,  fight  97, 
kill  Ramirez  103,  Congress  makes  approp.  for  presents  121, 
raids  122,  exped.  against  124,  murders  in  southern  Ariz.  130, 
northern  Ariz.  132,  kill  Indian  agt.  Leihy  137,  Com.  3d  Leg. 
reports  on  Indian  and  mil.  affairs  140,  editorial  in  Prescott 
Miner  on  Indian  affairs  145,  Congress  makes  approp.  198, 
raid  in  Verde  valley  225,  in  San  Pedro  valley  248,  Yuma  de- 
bauched by  soldiers  252,  failure  of  agts.  to  distribute  supplies 
274,  Genung  gathers  Mohave  on  Colorado  river  res.  314, 
outrages    331-2. 

V.  5,  McCormick's  message  2,  need  of  res.  7,  McCormick's  mes- 
sage to  5th  Leg.  41,  report  Com.  5th  Leg.  47,  kill  Carrol  and 
mail  carrier  103,  attack  Palmer  in  command  of  Kansas  & 
Pacific  Ry.'s  exped.  109,  treatment  of  White  by  Havasupai 
159,  182,  Mason's  report,  report  of  Inspector  Jones  206, 
reply  of  McDowell  215,  expeds.  against  descr.  by  McDowell, 
steal  horses  219-20,  Yavapai  and  Walapai  most  hostile  222, 
Emory  and  Johnston  descr.  Apache  226,  river  Indians  on 
warpath  241-2,  Gregg  issues  order  all  Indians  not  on  res. 
considered  hostile,  Supt.  Indian  Affairs  Dent  interferes  242. 
Dent  makes  treaty  with  Mohave  and  Chimehuevi  244,  Mc- 
Dowell countermand's  Gregg's  order  246,  Devin's  report  271, 
murders,  raids,  etc.,  279,  Price  campaign  against  Walapai, 
article  in  San  Francisco  Call  294,  Indian  question  still  un- 
solved 297,  continue  raids,  etc.,  298,  attack  on  Miller  ranch 
300,  Apache-Yuma  threaten  La  Paz  308,  attack  on  Burnt 
ranch  311,  Prescott  and  Walnut  Grove  settlers  killed  328, 
Pah-Utes  murder  three  of  Powell's  men  329,  Doran's  experi- 

28 


ence  with  Pah-Ute,  Jefford's  experience  with  Cochise,  Har- 
dy's  experience   with   Walapai  330. 

V.  6,  Apache  and  river  Indians  on  warpath  1,  Pima  and  Maricopa 
descr.  by  Rusling  8,  pop.  32,  raids,  etc.,  33,  Apaches  killed  by 
residents  of  Florence  62-3,  Maricopa  Charley's  ridiculous 
purchases  68,  Pima  and  Maricopa  under  Eugene  Carter  make 
raids  on  Apache  141,  certain  tribes  eat  caterpillars  263,  mur- 
ders  298-90. 

V.  7,  names  of  tribes,  hist.,  language,  customs. 

V.  8,  Navajo  pJaced  on  res.,  Apache  placed  on  res.  5-6,  removal 
to  San  Carlos  14,  number  and  location  of  res.  in  Ariz,  in 
1863  18,  exterminating  policy  19,  expeds.  against,  depreda- 
tions 23,  resume  depredations  99,  get  arms  through  Hopi 
llO-Hl,  descr.  trip  through  Indian  country  by  Marion  in 
Miner  117,  Miner  prints  petition  to  Pres.  with  list  of  301 
names  of  people  killed  by  Indians  124,  outrages  by  and  con- 
dition, in  Saf ford's  message  to  Leg.  115,  Camp  Grant  mas- 
sacre and  events  following  153,  citizen  expeds.  against  170, 
California  Leg.  passes  resolution  on  Indian  affairs  in  Ariz. 
196,  hghts  of  Moore  and   Russell  with  208. 

Indians — See   also   names   of   tribes. 

Indigo,  Don  Fernando — v.  1,  cause  of  Crabb  exped.  into  Mex.  332. 

Ingalls,  Frank  S. — v.  4,  307. 

Ingalls,  Wilfred  F. — v.  4,  surveys  lands  in  Ariz.  306,  near  Phoenix 
308. 

Inscription    Rock — See    El    Moro. 

Iretaba — v.  4,  friendly  chief  of  Mohave  121. 

Irrigation — v,  1,  in  Rio  Grande  valley  82,  v.  5,  McCormick's  mes- 
sage 5th  Leg.  40-1. 

Irrigation — see  also  canals  and  ditches. 

Irvine,  Edwd. — v.  6,  descr.  of  Swilling's  ranch  and  home  120, 
early  Phoenix  lawyer  179,  bio,  187. 

Irvine,   J.   A.   R.— v.   6,   188. 

Irvine,  Thos.— v.  6,  188. 

Irwin — V.  5,  killed  by  Indians  319. 

Irwin,  Assist.  Surg.  B.  J.  D. — v.  2,  aids  employees  Butterfield 
stage  line  attacked  by  Mex.  9. 

Ives,  Lt.  J.  C. — V.  1,  member  Whipple's  party  266,  v.  2,  explora- 
tions   17,  20-23,  56,   207. 

Israel— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  100,  141. 

J 

Jackson,  Col.— v.  2,  215. 

Jackson — v.  3,  owner  restaurant  at  Gimletville  35,  212. 

Jackson,  A.  J. — v.  2,  killed  by  Apache  140,  Camp  Grant  massacre 
281,  v.  8,  140. 

Jackson,  Alex  M. — v.  2,  85. 

Jackson,  Calvin — v.  3,  206,  v.  6,  87. 

Jackson,  Henry  D. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90,  dies  during  ses- 
sion  118. 

Jackson,  Jarvis — v.  4,  settler  on  San  Pedro  249. 

Jackson,  Jesse — v.  6,  87. 

Jackson,  Orrick — v.  5,  in  "White  Conquest"  gives  number  whites 
killed  by  Indians  284. 

Jackson,  R. — v.  4,  flouring  mill  in  Tucson  255. 

Jackson,  D. — v.  6,  87. 

Jackson  Quartz  Vein — v.  2,  75. 

Jacobs,  B.  M.— V.  5,  34. 

Jacobs,  Ed  C. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Jacobs.  L.  M.— V.  5,  34. 

29 


Jacobson — v.  4,  sells  Agua  Caliente  ranch  to  Woolsey  and  Mar- 
tin 2J7. 

Jaeger,  L.  J.  F. — v.  1,  estab.  ferry  across  Colorado  236,  attacked 
by  Indians  2Z7 ,  sale  of  lots  in  Yuma  352,  v.  2,  owner  in  gold 
mine  on  Colorado  river  76,  bio.  188,  v.  6,  71. 

James,  Geo. — v.  6,  early  farmer  in  Salt  River  valley  140. 

James,  Geo.  Horton — v.  7,  legends  of  Havasupai  116,  legends  of 
Walapai  125. 

Janin — v.  2,   156. 

Jaramillo,  Jose — v,  8,  killed  by  Indians  137. 

Jay,  Leroy— v.  4,  261,  v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  280,  v.  8,  129. 

Jaycox,  Henry — v.  3,  member  Woolsey's  exped,  against  Apaches 
261. 

Jeffords,  Thos.  J. — v.  2,  bears  dispatches  Canby  to  Carleton  120, 
bio.  227,  makes  friends  with  Cochise  227,  guides  Howard  to 
Cochise  230,  assists  in  making  treaty,  made  Indian  agt.  234, 
killing  of  Rogers  and  Spence  237,  death  240,  v.  5,  experience 
with  Cochise  330,  v.  7,  25. 

Johns — V.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  141. 

Johnson — v.  1,  killing  of  Indians  117,  owner  in  Patagonia  mine 
292. 

Johnson — v.  2,  one  owner  of  Colorado  River  Copper  Co,  74. 

Johnson,   Lt. — v.  3,  29. 

Johnson — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  136. 

Johnson,  Albert  Sidney — v.  2,  216. 

Johnson,  Alfred — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  134. 

Johnson,  Pres.  Andrew — v,  4,  resolution  of  2d  Leg.  159. 

Johnson,  Capt.  Geo.  A. — v.  1,  reaches  mouth  of  Colorado  river 
252,  V.  2,  steamboat  man  on  Colorado  19,  explores  Black 
Canyon  23-4. 

Johnson,  Harry  ("Hog") — v.  3,  255,  killed  by  Mohave-Apaches 
255,  V.  8,  128. 

Johnson,  Robt. — v.  4,  204. 

Johnson,  Thos. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243,  Pres.  mining 
dists.  245,  306,  310. 

Johnson,  Wm. — v.  6,  married  at  Ft.  McDowell  266-7. 

Johnstone,  Capt. — v,  5,  descr.  of  Apache  227. 

Jones,  G.  W.— v.  3,  80. 

Jones,  Capt.  J.  N. — v.  1,  with  Whipple  party  266. 

Jones,  Jno. — v.  2,  Carleton's  dispatch  bearer  87,  120. 

Jones,  N.  Richmond,  Jr. — v.  2,  74. 

Jones,  R.,  Jr.— v.  2,  70. 

Jones,  Col.  Roger — v.  5,  reports  on  military  operations  1866,  7, 
recommends  disposition  of  troops,  dangers  from  Indians, 
discomforts  of  soldiery  206,  recommends  separate  mil.  dept. 
commander    for    Ariz.    235. 

Jones,  Samuel — v.  3,  14. 

Jones,  W.  Claude — v.  3,  speaker  House  Rep.  1st  Leg.  90,  92,  94, 
farewell  address  to  1st  Leg.  129,  early  lawyer  in  Tucson  249. 

Jones,  W.  P.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  127. 

Jones,  Dr.  W.  W^. — v.  2,  partner  Michael  Goldwater  287,  v.  6, 
experience  with  Michael  Wormser  199-200,  attacked  by  In- 
dians 211-12,  early  freighter  216,  v.  8,  train  attacked  by  In- 
dians 146. 

Judicial  Districts — v.  1,  created  by  constitutional  convention  at 
Tucson  325,  v.  3,  organized  by  proclamation  by  Goodwin  74, 
in  message  101. 

Judson — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Juniper  House — v.  3,  1st  hotel  and  restaurant  in  Prescott  195. 

Justice,  Jno. — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 

30 


K 

Kaler— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  138. 

Kansas  &  Pacific  Railway  Co. — v.  5,  organizes  surv.  exped.  across 
Ariz.  100. 

Kaufman,  Capt. — v.  8,  mules  stolen  149. 

Kautz,  Col.  A.  v.— V.  2,  207,  v.  4,  in  command  at  Ft.  Whipple  260, 
V.  8,  proposes  removal  of  Indians  to  San  Carlos  13-14. 

Keam,  T.  V.— v.  7,  167. 

Kearny,  Gen.  Stephen  W. — v.  1,  commands  army  invading  Cali- 
fornia 129,  leaves  Bent's  Fort  130-1,  speeches  to  Mex.  132, 
instructions  from  Sec.  of  War  132,  organizes  civil  govt,  towns 
of  N.  M.  133,  begins  march  to  Cal.,  news  of  conquest  from  Kit 
Carson,  Carson  guides  134-5,  route,  instructs  Cook  to  open 
wagon  road  to  Pacific,  trades  with  Apaches,  Pimas,  occupa- 
tion of  N.  M.  135,  Navajo  306. 

Kelly,  Oscar— -V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Kellog,  Benj.   W.— v.  6,  94. 

Kendall,  L.  C— v.  6,  179. 

Kendrick,  Maj. — v,  1,  tricked  by  Navajos  310. 

Kendrick,  Jas. — v.  1,  killed  by  Indians  276. 

Kennedy — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  100-1. 

Kennerley,  Dr.  C.  B. — v.  1,  member  Whipple's  party  266. 

Kent,  Dr.— V.  1,  killed  with  Bill  Williams  by  Utes  105. 

Kenyon,  Chas.  H. — v.  6,  marriage  to  Sarah  Moore  223. 

Kern,  R.  H. — v.  1,  member  Sitgreaves  party  264. 

Kibbers,  G. — v.  1,  member  Arizona  Mining  &  Trading  Co.'s 
explor.  party  278. 

Killian,  John — v.  4,  killed  by  Indians  86,  v.  8,  142. 

King — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  136. 

King,  Dave — v.  4,  rescued  by  mail  carrier  65-67. 

King,  Geo. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  143. 

King,  Wm. — v.  5,  attacked  by  Indians  309-lOi 

Kino,  Padre  Eusebio  Francisco — v.  1,  missions  among  Indians  in 
Ariz.  56,  with  Salvatierra  57,  in  Pimeria  Alta  58,  visits  mis- 
sions, met  by  Sobaipuri  begging  for  padres  78,  second  en- 
trada,  1st  white  man  at  Casa  Grande,  exped.  into  Ariz,  with 
Mange,  with  mil.  exped.  at  Quiburi,  down  San  Pedro  to  Gila, 
Casa  Grande,  up  Santa  Cruz  river  59,  return  to  Mex.,  again 
visits  Ariz.,  lays  foundation  of  San  Xavier  del  Bac,  visits 
Yumas,   last  visit   60. 

Kirby,  Andrew — v.  2,  companion  of  Jack  Swilling  254. 

Kirkland,  Wm.  H. — v.  1,  raised  1st  American  flag  in  Tucson, 
1st  white  man  to  marry  white  woman  in  Ariz.  345,  v.  4,  47, 
V.  5,  builds  road  Tucson  to  Santa  Rita  mts.  227,  v.  6,  94,  169, 
daughter  claimed  to  be  1st  American  born  in  Phoenix  225. 

Kirkland  Valley — v,  4,  setlement  in  271. 

Kitchen,  Peter — v.  2,  bio.  195,  v.  6,  descr.  trip  from  ranch  \n 
Sonora  44,  v.  8,  fight  with  Apaches  207. 

Kness.  Wm. — v,  8,  interpreter  for  Vincent  Colyer  235,  testifies 
for  Indians  after   Camp   Grant  massacre  244. 

Knodle.  Sam — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  142. 

Knott,  Jos.  W.— V.  6,  87. 

Knowles — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  136. 

Krautz — v.  4.  should  be  Kautz  260. 

Kruger — v.  8,  survivor  Wickenburg  massacre  289. 

Kustel — V.  2,  member  Samuel  Butter  worth's  party   156. 

L 

Lachman,  Henry — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  146. 
Lafferty,  Lt. — v.  8,  wounded  by  Apaches  29. 

31 


La  Force,   Wm.— v.  6,  89. 

Laing,  Jas. — v.  2,  connected  with  Buttertield  stage  line  3,  killed 
by  Mex.  7. 

Lajeunesse,  Basil — v.  1,  one  of  Fremont's  guides  108. 

Lallier,  Bill— v.  2,   148. 

Lambertson,  Timothy — v.  2,  pioneer  212,  249,  v.  4,  40,  v.  5, 
wounded  by  Indians  279,  280,  v.  8,  horses  stolen  148-9. 

Lamy,  Bishop — v.  4,  visits  ler.  290-1,  sends  two  priests  to  Ter. 
292-3,  294. 

Land  District — v.  4,  2d  Leg.  asks  Congress  for  separate  dist.  for 
Ariz.  162,  office  estab.  by  Congress  198,  attached  to  dist, 
of  N.  M.  303,  removed  to  dist.  of  Cal.  306,  v.  5,  5th  Leg.  asks 
Congress  for  appointment  of  Surv.  Gen.  43. 

Lang — V.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215. 

Langdon,  Dr. — v.  1,  estab,  ferry  across  Colorado  235. 

Language — v.  7,  Apache  claimed  same  as  Tartar  Chinese  12-13. 

Lanz,  Jno. — v.  8,  victim  Wickenburg  massacre  290. 

La  Paz — v.  1,  gold  placers  disc,  by  Pauline  Weaver  297,  v,  2,  193, 
abandons  287.  v,  2,  292,  v.  4.  seat  of  justice  of  Yuma  Co.  8, 
256,  298,  V,  5,  threatened  by  Indians  308. 

La  Paz  Mining  District — v.  4,  9, 

Largo,  Sarcillo — v.  1,  Navajo  chief  310. 

Larkin — v,  1,  consul  at  Monterey  123. 

Larabee,  C.  F. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Larsen,  Jno. — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71,  1st  to  homestead 
claim  in  Salt  River  valley  82. 

Latimer — v.    6,    71. 

Laughlin,  Jno. — v.  3,  owner  1st  shop  in  Prescott  213,  v.  4,  43. 

Lavery,  Robt.— v.  6,  88. 

Lawson,  Lt. — v,  5,  member  Kans.  &  Pac,  Ry,  surv.  exped.  182. 

Lazard — v.  8,  cattle  stolen  by  Indians  141. 

Leach,  Jas.  B.— v.  2,  2,  9. 

Le  Barr,  Johnnie — v.  6,  196.     . 

Lee,  Jas. — V.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71. 

Lee,  J.  H. — v.  8,  cattle  stolen  by  Indians  135. 

Legal — V.  3,  Howell  Code  adopted  by  1st  Leg.  92,  117,  Leg.  pro- 
vides for  printing  laws  136,  137,  Judge  Howell  resigns,  Henry 
Backus  succeeds,  Chief  Justice  Turner  resigns,  Jno.  Titus 
succeeds.  Judge  Allyn  resigns,  Harley  Carter  succeeds  246, 
Hezekiah  Brooks  1st  probate  judge  in  Yavapai  Co.  247,  little 
attention  to  records  of  courts  248-9,  v.  5,  mentioned  by  Mc- 
Cormick  12,  5th  Congress  asked  for  approp.  to  codify  laws 
43,  Judge  Backus  decides  3d,  4th  and  5th  Legs,  illegal  98, 
mention  scarcity  of  courts  by  McDowell  233. 

Legislature — v.  3,  Goodwin  issues  proclamation  ordering  election 
75,  members  of  1st  89-90,  adopts  Howell  code  92,  Ter.  divided 
into  4  counties  93,  convening  of  1st,  officials  94,  Gov.'s  mes- 
sage 95,  Howell  code,  resignation  of  Jose  M.  Redondo  117, 
death  of  Jackson,  fight  on  location  of  capital  118,  report  of 
Com.  on  Colorado  river  119,  joint  resolution  instructing 
Poston  to  secure  arms  from  Govt.,  also  estab.  mail  routes 
122-23,  report  com.  on  education  123-4,  memorial  to  Sec.  of 
War  vetoed  by  Gov.  124,  farewell  message  Gov.  to  1st  Leg. 
127,  Speaker  Claude  Jones'  farewell  address  129,  divorces 
Jno.  Capron  and  Dr.  Elliott  Coues  131,  estab.  country  road, 
incorporates  toll  roads  132,  grants  ferry  right  across  Colorado 
135,  approp.  for  schools  135-6,  publication  of  laws  136-7,  seal 
for  Ter.  137,  incorporates  Ariz.  Ry.  Co.  138-9,  1st  approp.  bill 
140,  asks  Congress  to  increase  pay  of  officials  and  members 
of  Leg.   141-2,  asks  for  approp.  for  placing  Indians  on  res. 

32 


142-3,  asks  Congress  for  approp.  for  improvement  Colorado 
river  143,  1st  convened  at  Prescott  198,  thanks  Woolsey  for 
services  against  Indians  277,  v.  4,  report  of  com.  of  3d  Leg. 
on  mil.  and  Indian  affairs  140,  2d  Leg.  convenes,  message 
of  McCormick  150,  acts  passed  by  resolutions  and  memorials 
155,  3d  Leg.  165,  acts  passed  by  resolutions  and  memorials 
185,  V.  5,  4th  Leg.  convened  at  Prescott  1-15-26,  5th  con- 
vened at  Tucson,  3,  43-50,  57,  63,  98-99,  v.  6,  6th  Leg.,  per- 
sonnel 124,  creates  Maricopa  Co.  127,  estab.  public  schools  242. 

Leib,  Chas. — v.  3,  defeated  for  Congress,  bio.  88. 

Leihy,  Geo.  W. — v.  2,  Sec.  Yavapai  mining  dist.  307,  v.  3,  member 
1st  Leg.  89,  Indian  agt.,  killed  by  Indians  296,  v.  4,  137,  313, 
V.  8,  2,  129. 

Lemon,  Sergt. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Lennon — v.  2,  assists  Woolsey  in  Pinole  treaty  219. 

Lennon,  Jos.  C. — v.  4,  184,  v.  5,  attacked  by  Indians  310-11. 

Lent  &  Harpending  Party — v.  8,  attacked  by  Indians  102. 

Leon,  Francisco  S. — v,  3,  member  1st  Leg.  89,  v.  4,  149,  v.  6,  129. 

Leon,  Pedro  Ponce  de — v,  1,  opposes  Onate  35. 

Leonard — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  148. 

Leroux — v.  1,  guide  of  Alormon  Battalion  138. 

Lewis,  Col.  H.— V.  4,  California  Vol.  123-124. 

Lewis,  Chas.  W. — v.  5,  2. 

Lewis,  M. — v.  3,  member  Woolsey  exped.  259. 

Lewis,  Martin — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 

Lewis,  Nathaniel — v.  5,  2. 

Lewis,  Sol. — V.  4,  organizer  in  Bank  of  Ariz.  270. 

Liberos,  Ramon — v.  7,  priest  in  charge  San  Xavier  299. 

Library — v.  3,  commencement  of  State  250,  v.  5,  5th  Leg.  asks 
Congress  for  approp.  for  library  43. 

Lieb,  Dr.  and  wife — v.  3,  with  exped.  to  estab.  post  at  gold  dig- 
gings 31,  211,  widow  marries  Judge  Hezekiah  Brooks  211, 
v.  4,  269. 

Liles,  Abraham  B.— v.  6,  94. 

Limon,   Ensign — v.   1,  205. 

Lincoln,  Pres. — v.  2,  signs  bill  creating  Ter.  of  Ariz.  323,  v.  4, 
resolutions  of  2d  Leg.  in  regard  to  death  159-60. 

Lind,  Jake — v.  4,  315. 

Lindsay,  Capt. — v.   1,  successful  attack  on   Navajos   316-17. 

Lindsey,  Oliver — v.  5,  member  4th  Leg.,  Speaker  House  2,  mem- 
ber 5th  Leg.  34. 

Linsey — v.  4,  317. 

Linton,  L.  M.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 

Lipps,  Oscar  H. — v.  7,  religion,  etc.,  of  Navajos  44. 

Liquor,  sale  to  Indians — v.  5,  McCormick's  message  to  5th  Leg. 
41. 

Little,  William— V.  4,  65,   165. 

Lockwood,  Lt.  D.  W.— v.  8,  86. 

Loew,  Dr.  Oscar — v.  7,  finds  no  religion  among  Hopi  161. 

Long,  Anthony — v,  6,  pioneer  of  Round  valley  277. 

Long,  Henry— V.  2,  killed  by  Apaches  281,  v.  8,  147.  164. 

Long,  Wm.  H. — v.  6,  early  owner  in  Silver  King  mine  60. 

Lopez — V.  1,  priest  killed  by  Indians  40. 

Lopez,  Clemente — v.  8,  Mex.  outlaw,  lynched  205. 

Lopez,  Secundia — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians   131. 

Lopez.  Victorio — v.  6,  pioneer  of  Florence  56. 

Lord — V.  2,  earlv  owner  in  Mowry  mine  68. 

Lord.  Dr.  C.  H'— v.  1,  resident  Tucson  345.  v.  4.  129.  v.  5,  Ter. 
Auditor  1868  57.  receiver  of  public  moneys  in  Tucson  327, 
v.  8,  deputy  agt.  for  Pima  4. 

33 


Lord  &  Williams— V.  5,  Z'll . 

Loreles,  Epumusema — v.  1,  resident  of  Tucson  349. 

Loring,  Fred  W. — v.  8,  victim  Wickenburg  massacre  290. 

Loring,  Geo. — v.  6,  early  merchant  in  Phoenix  176-7. 

Loring,  Col.  W.  H. — v.  2,  joins  Confed.  84. 

Lovell,  Col.  Chas.  S. — v.  5,  commended  by  4th  Leg.  18,  succeeds 

Mason  in  S.  Ariz.,  succeeded  by  Crittenden  298. 
Low,  F.   F. — V.  3,   146. 
Lowell,  Camp — See  Camp  Lowell. 
Lount,  Daniel  S. — v.  4,  165,  v.  5,  member  4th  Leg.  1. 
Lount,  Geo. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  148,  242,  320,  v.  3,  estab. 

1st  sawmill  near   Prescott  216. 
Lount   Party — v.   3,   arrival  210. 
Lucas,  Jas.  A. — v.  1,  provisional  Sec.  of  State  of  Ariz.  325,  v.  2, 

appointed  Ter.  Sec.  by  Baylor   (Confed.)  85. 
Lucero,  Capt.  Bias — v.  1,  in  campaigns  against  Navajo  312. 
Lucas,  Lucas — v.  8,  Mex,  who  killed  Edwd.  Lumley  204. 
Luke— v.  6,  87. 

Lumley,   Edwd. — v.  8,  killed  by   Mex.  204. 
Lunn,  Jacob — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 
Lynchings — v.  8,   Mex.  outlaws  203. 
Lynde,   Maj.  Isaac — v.  2,  orders  abandonment  of   Ft.   Buchanan 

61,  surrenders  to  Baylor  85 
Lynx  Creek — v.  2,  early  mining  298. 
Lyon,    Sub-Indian    Agt.    Abraham — v.    2,    arms    Pimas    against 

Apache  153. 
Lytle — V.  8,  killed  by  Mex.  at  Mission  camp  201. 

M 

McAteer,  Pat — v.  4,  fight  with  Indians  133. 

McCall,  D.  T.— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

McCall,  Thos.— V.  4,  killed  by  Indians  86. 

McCannon,  J. — v.  3,  member  Woolsey's  exped.  against  Apache 
266. 

McClave,  Maj. — v.  3,  with  Woolsey  in  fight  with  Indians  278, 
V.  8,  24. 

McCleave,  Capt.  Wm. — v.  2,  captured  by  Confed.  87,  153. 

McClellan,  Geo.  B.— v.  2,  207. 

McClellan,  Thos.  C— v.  2,  killed  by  Apaches  155. 

McClelland,  Maj.— v.  2,  238. 

McCook,  Gen.  A.  McD.— v.  7,  194. 

McCormick,  R.  C. — v.  2,  (statement  of  defeat  by  Hiram  Stevens 
for  Congress  is  in  error — McCormick  not  a  candidate)  198, 
defeats  Peter  A.  Brady  284,  1st  Sec.  of  Ter.  325,  v.  3,  brings 
printing  press  31,  46,  speech  at  Navajo  Springs  69-70,  designs 
temporary  seal  for  Ter.  138,  incorporator  in  Ariz.  Ry.  138-9, 
pays  highest  price  for  lot  in  Prescott  207,  furnishes  supplies 
for  Woolsey's  exped.  273,  v.  4,  letter  to  N.  Y.  Tribune  1. 
suggests  name  of  Prescott  58,  controversy  with  McDowell 
143,  succeeds  Goodwin  as  Governor  148,  message  to  2d  Leg. 
150,  3d  Leg.  174,  letter  to  Journal  of  Commerce  282,  v.  5. 
message  to  4th  Leg.  2,  5th  Leg.  34,  reference  to  election  to 
Congress  in  message  to  5th  Leg.  42,  commended  by  5th  Leg. 
45.  takes  seat  in  Congress  99,  horse  stolen  by  Indians  220. 
criticises  McDowell  250,  v.  6,  3,  47,  v.  8,  194,  reports  Mex. 
outrages  to  govt.  202. 

McCormick,  Mrs.  R.  C.— v.  3,  death  211. 

McCoy,  Jim — v.  2,  mail  carrier  3. 

McCracken,  Jackson — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243,  bio.,  elected 
to  1st  Leg.  264,  disc.  Del  Pasco  and  McCracken  mines  265. 

34 


V.  3,  80,  member  1st  Leg.  90,  v.  4,  149,  v.  5,  attacked  by  Indians 
283. 

McCracken  Mine — v.  2,  disc.  265. 

McCullough,  Joe — v,  6,  pioneer  of  Round  valley  277. 

McDermitt,  C.  C. — v.  6,  clerk  of  1st  dist.  court  Maricopa  Co.  136, 
1st   notary   public   213, 

McDerwin,  Jno.— v.  8,  172. 

McDougal,  Sen. — v.  2,  supports  bill  organizing  Ter.  323. 

McDougall— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  148. 

McDowell,  Fort — See  Ft.  McDowell. 

McDowell,  Gen.  Irvin — v.  4,  assigns  Mason  to  dept.  of  Ariz.  123, 
reception  in  Prescott,  estab.  govt,  farm  at  Ft.  McDowell  139, 
V.  5,  report  on  conditions,  commends  Arizona  Vols.  190,  crit- 
icised by  Inspector  Jones  207,  replies  215,  reports  on  expeds. 
against  Indians  219,  orders  location  of  troops  236,  counter- 
mands Gregg's  order  246,  criticised  by  McCormick,  2d  re- 
port 250,  special  mention  by  Sanford  253,  visits  Ariz.,  un- 
popular 298,  succeeded  by  Ord  302. 

McDuffle,  J.  Thos. — Member  Boundary  Commission  Survey  148. 

McElroy — v,  1,  member  Ariz.  Mining  &  Trading  Co.'s  party  278. 

McFarland,  Wm. — v.  8,  station  keeper  at  Sacaton,  mysterious 
disappearance  203. 

McGarry,  Col. — v.  5,  Indian  fighter  223. 

McGinnis,  E.  S. — v.  4,  Supervisor  for  Pah-Ute  Co.  157. 

McGoldrick,  Thos. — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71,  saves  Dan 
•    Twomey's   life  82, 

McGowan,  Edwd. — v.  1,  early  judge  dist.  court,  elected  to  Con- 
gress 326. 

McGrath,  Michael — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71. 

McGregor,  Richard — v.  6,  kills  Jas.  Beatty  235. 

McGregor,   Capt.   Thos. — v.  8,  258. 

Mcintosh,  T.  W.— v.  6,  208. 

McKean,  Rev.  Franklin— v.  6,  170,  179,  236. 

McKenna,    Michael — v.    4,    165. 

McKenzie,  Alexander — v.  2,  killed  by  Apaches  281. 

McKey,  Alexander — v.  2,  acct.  of  disc,  of  placers  at  La  Paz  292, 
V.  4,  149,  165,  V.  5,  member  4th  Leg.  1,  5th  Leg.  33. 

McKinney,  Roderick — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243,  pioneer 
miner  311. 

McKinnie,  Jas,  B, — v.  6,  erects  building  at  E.  Phoenix  99. 

McLane,  Capt. — v.  1,  commands  military  in  Yost's  campaign 
against  Navajos  12. 

McLane   Fort — See  Ft.   McLane. 

McMahan — v,   3,   assayer  36. 

McMullen,  J.— v.  6,  90. 

McMurray— v.  8,  killed   by   Indians   137. 

McNeal,   Lt. — v.  4,   sent  to  Verde  valley  246. 

McNulty — V.  4,  attacked  by   Indians   135. 

McPherson,  T.— v.  6,  91. 

McWard,  H. — v.  3,  deputy  collector  at  Tucson  236. 

McWhorter,  Jno. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

McWilliams.  Thos. — v.  6,  member   Swilling  party  71. 

McWillie,  M.  H. — v.  2,  appointed  atty.  gen.  by  Baylor  85,  dele- 
gate to  Confed.  Congress  97. 

Magoffin.  Ambassador  Jas. — v.  1,  secret  mission  to  Mex.  130. 

Mahan,  A.  P.— v.  4,  Z7 . 

Mail  Service — v.  3,  1st  mail  from  La  Paz  to  Prescott  36,  Good- 

.    win's  rnessage  110,  v,  4,  21,  McCormick's  message  to  Leg.  178, 

3d   Leg.  asks  Congress   196,  1st  mail  to  reach  Tucson  after 

civil  war  288,  Fish's  descr.  mail  service  289,  v.  5,  McCormick 

35 


mentions  10,  5th  Leg.  asks  Congress  to  estab.  mail  route 
Tucson  to  Sasabi  Flat  43,  requests  mail  route  from  Tucson 
to  Wickenburg  and  semi-weekly  service  Prescott  to  Albu- 
querque 44,  j\icDowell  comments  on  poor  service  233. 

Maldonado,  Alunzo  Del  Castillo — v.  1,  with  Cabeza  de  Vaca,  heal- 
ing powers  2. 

Malron,  Alexander — v.  3,  opens  1st  day  school  in  Prescott  197. 

Mangas  Coloradas — v.  1,  meets  Kearny  135,  argument  against 
Boundary  Commission  Survey  rescuing  Mex.  boys  211,  de- 
mands restitution  for  killing  of  Apache  218,  hist.  230,  mar- 
ried to  Mex.  231,  marries  daughters  to  chief  231,  descr.  232, 
V.  2,  fight  at  Stein's  pass  with  Free  Thompson  and  party  59, 
attacks  Pinos  Altos  123,  whipping  124,  with  Cochise  mas- 
sacres white  miners  at  Apache  pass  126-7,  shot  by  Teal  132, 
recovery  142,  killed  143,  desc.  147,  150,  hist,  of  wrongs  to  his 
people  151. 

Manning — v.  5,  wounded  by  Indians  296. 

Manuelito — v.  2,  Navajo  war  chief,  head  of  Indian  police  on  res. 
180. 

Marble,  Jno.  H. — v.  1,  killed  by  Indians  276. 

Marco  de  Niza,  Padre — v.  1,  sent  by  Mendoza  to  Seven  Cities 
of  Cibola,  instructions  8,  journey  10,  reports  13,  exped.  or- 
ganized, reports  15-16,  sent  back  from  Nueva  Galicia  by  Coro- 
nado  19,  v.  7,  138. 

Marcou,  Jules — v.  1,  member  Whipple  party  266. 

Marcy,  Ed. — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  318. 

Maricopa — v.  1,  Mormon  Battalion  camps  at  villages,  Cook's 
descr.  145,  number  146,  attacked  by  other  tribes  262,  v.  2, 
conflicts  with  Yuma  compact  with  Pima  27,  attacked  by  other 
tribes  29,  survey  of  lands  and  distribution  of  presents  29, 
V.  3,  Poston's  speech  in  Congress  160,  v.  4,  16,  21,  company 
in  Arizona  Vols.  96,  v.  6,  desc.  by  Rusling  8,  v.  7,  friendly 
to  whites  2,  hist.,  etc.,  225,  v.  8,  res.  with  Pima  3. 

Maricopa  Charley — v.  6,  ridiculous  purchases  68. 

Maricopa  County — v.  5,  4th  Leg.  attempts  to  create  26,  v.  6, 
created  by  6th  Leg.  127,  comments  on  129,  text  of  bill  creating 
130,  officials  appointed  by  Safford  133,  1st  court  house  erected 
by  Hancock  and  Monihan   134-5,  173. 

Maricopa  Mining  Co. — v.  2,  72. 

Maricopa  Wells — v.  4,  1st  application  for  homestead  308,  v.  6, 
desc.  64-5,  pre-empted  by  Jno.  B.   Allen  65. 

Marion — Jno.  H. — v.  5,  bio.  347,  death  350,  v.  8,  in  Miner  descr. 
trip  through  Indian  country  with  Stoneman  .117,  meets  Vin- 
cent Colyer  280. 

Markelville,  W.  B. — v.  7,  member  Mormon  exped.  to  Hopi  145. 

Marmaduke,  Andrew  J. — v.  6,   124. 

Marquez,  Padre — v.  1,  leaves  Onate  38. 

Marriages,  Early — v.  3,  Jno  Dickson  and  Mary  Ehle,  reported 
1st  in  Prescott  211,  v.  4,  regulated  by  2d  Leg.  158,  1st  in  Pres- 
cott, Jno.  Boggs,  269,  second  269,  v.  6,  Chas.  Kenyon  and 
Sarah  Moore,  in  Phoenix  208-9,  223,  Geo.  Buck  and  Matilda 
Murray  in  Phoenix  222,  223,  Wm.  Johnson  and  Miss  Adams 
at  Ft.  McDowell  266-7,  sister  of  Jno.  F.  Crampton  to  Henry 
Fitzgerald   268-9. 

Martin,  Geo. — v.  2,  partner  King  Woolsey  215,  v.  3,  79,  v.  4,  with 
Woolsey  purchases  Agua  Caliente  ranch  277,  bio.  277. 

Martin,  Luther — v.  6,  pioneer  280. 

Martin,  Romano — v.  1,  killed  by  Navajos  309. 

Martinez,  Padre  Alonzo — v.  1,  with  Onate's  exped.  38. 

Martinez,  Mariano — v.  1,  Navajo  chief  307. 

36 


Maryville — v.  6,  founded  by  Wm.  Rowe  232-3-4. 

Mason,  Chas. — v.  2,  pony  rider  and  mail  carrier  2,  v.  4,  59. 

Mason,   Chas. — v.  3,  32, 

Mason,  Chas.  G. — v.  6,  1st  settler  in  Florence  49,  early  owner  in 
Silver  King  mine  60. 

Mason  Fort — See  Fort  Mason. 

Mason,  Col.  J.  W. — v.  8,  1st  irrigation  ditch  at  Camp  Verde  12. 

Mason,  Gen.  Jno.  S. — v.  4,  assists  Arizona  Vols.  96-7,  in  charge  of 
dept.  of  Arizona  123,  activities  124,  126-7,  v.  5,  report  on 
Ariz,  for  1865-6,  183,  succeeded  by  Wallen  and  Lovell  298. 

Masonic  Lodge — v.  6,  1st  in  Ter.  and  in  Phoenix  227. 

Massacres — v.  2,  Mex.  wagon  drivers  40,  lumbermen  at  Canoa 
55-6,  by  Cochise  and  Mangas  Coloradas  at  Stein's  Pass  59, 
Camp  Grant,  descr.  by  Oury  269,  v.  8,  Wickenburg  273,  289. 

Maston,  Thos.  J. — Early  dist.  atty.  326. 

Matthews,  Jno.   H. — v.  5,  2. 

Matthews,  Dr.  Washington — v.  7,  descr.  of  Navajo  "fire  play"  89. 

Maxwell,  Lucien  B. — v.  1,  partner  Kit  Carson  112. 

Maxwell,  Thos. — v.  6,  robs  parties  at  Maryville,  killed  resisting 
arrest  234-5. 

May,  Dennis— V.  8,  294. 

May,  Ed. — v.  4,  fight  with  Indians  133. 

May,  Tom— V.  4,  261. 

Mealman,    Hiram — v.   2,   member    Walker   party   243. 

Mechanics'  Lein  Law — v.  4,  passed  by  2d  Leg,  157. 

Meinhold,  Capt. — v.  8,  exped.  against  Indians  112,  trails  partici- 
pants in  Wickenburg  massacre,  292-4. 

Mellen— V.  8,  killed  by   Indians   127. 

Mellon,  C.  G. — V.  2,  pioneer  miner  307. 

Melvin,  Geo. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Melvin,  Jos. — v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215,  v.  5,  attacked  by 
Indians  308-9,  v.  6,  124. 

Menassee  (Herman-Hyman  co.) — v.  6,  early  merchants  in  Phoe- 
nix 179,  183,  187,  206. 

Mendel,  Col.— v.  2,  207. 

Mendibles,  Juanita — v.  2,  1st  wife  of  Peter  A.  Brady  284. 

Mendoza,  Anna  De — v.  1,  assists  Onate  38. 

Mendoza,  Antonio  de — v.  1,  Spanish  viceroy,  friendly  to  Indians, 
sends  Niza  and  Estevan  to  Seven  Cities  of  Cibola  8. 

Mercer,  Jas.  L. — v.  6,  95,  124,  recorder  of  Maricopa  co,  133. 

Meriwether,  Gov. — v.  1,  succeeds  Lane  309,  treaty  with  Navajo 
310. 

Merrill,  Pvt.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Mescalero  Apache — v.  2,  on  war  path  30. 

Mesea,  Padre — v.  4.  early  priest  in  Tucson  291, 

Mesquite  School — v.  6,  E.  M.  Johnson  1st  teacher  243. 

Messages — v,  3,  Gov.  to  1st  Leg.  95,  peonage  89,  judicial  dists., 
counties  101,  revenue  102,  mining  103,  106,  mil,  and  schools 
104,  railroads  109,  mail  routes  110,  Indians  111,  Indian  res.  113. 
navigation  Colorado,  agriculture,  climate  114,  Goodwin's  fare- 
well message  to  1st  Leg.  127,  v  4,  McCormick  to  2d  Leg.  150, 
to  3d  Leg,  174. 

Messenger,  Capt. — v.  4,  campaign  against  Indians  125. 

Messeur.  Frank — v.  8.  killed  by  Indians  142 

Meteoric  Crater — v.  8,  disc,  by  Banta  31. 

Methodist  Episcopal  Church  South — v,  6,  1st  Protestant  organi- 
zation in  Salt  River  valley  235. 

Metzler>  Frank  S. — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71, 

Mexican  Outlaws — v,  2,  infest  Ariz,  after  withdrawal  of  troops  61. 

VI 


Mexican  War — v.  1,  127,  hostilities  begun  128,  war  declared  129, 
Jackson's  proposal  for  purchase  151),  Sec.  of  State  Buchanan's 
offer  152,  iVlex.  Comrs.,  treaty  of  Guadalupe  Hidalgo,  adopted 
by  Senate  and  ratified  at  Queretaro  153,  protocol  signed  178, 
Mex.  Comr.  for  Boundary  Survey,  Gen.  Conde  183. 

Meyer,  Chas.  H. — v.  1,  resident  Tucson  345,  v.  2,  bio.,  city  re- 
corder Tucson  240,  v.  4,  reforms  Tucson  254-5. 

Meyer,  Conrad — v,  6,  early  settler  in  Tempe  109. 

Meyers,  Pvt. — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  143. 

Meyers,  Col. — v.  1,  commands  troops  against  Navajo  312,  fight 
with  Navajo  316,  conquers  318. 

Military — v.  1,  mil.  occupation  by  U.  S.,  withdrawal  of  troops 
before  civil  war  291. 

V.  2,  withdrawn  from  Ariz.  60,  western  Ariz,  attached  to-  N.  M., 
new  dist.  estab.  by  Carleton,  Ft.  Whipple  located  250. 

V.  3,  Carleton's  expeds.  3,  31,  Ft.  Whipple  estab.  31,  military 
withdrawn  217,  Indian  fights  281,  Cutler's  report  285. 

V.  4,  Gov.  authorized  to  raise  regiment  Arizona  Vols.  93,  officers 
96,  Mason  assists  97,  Wallen  commends  Washburn  for 
services  against  Indians  111,  part  California  Vols,  mustered 
out,  old  Ft,  Buchanan  attacked  by  Indians  122,  Ariz,  trans- 
ferred to  dept.  of  Cal.,  reinforcements  123,  Mason's  Indian 
policy  124,  failure  126-7,  removal  127,  Ft.  McDowell  estab. 
138,  Govt,  farm  estab.  hdqtrs  removed  to  Tucson  139,  report 
of  3d  Leg.  140,  controversy  between  McCormick  and  Mc- 
Dowell 143,  hdqtrs  moved  to  Tucson  252,  Camp  Goodwin 
abandoned   277. 

V.  5,  McCormick  urges  separate  dept.  2-3,  4th  Leg.  requests  18, 
Gregg,  Crittenden,  Safford  and  Price  commended  18-19,  5th 
Leg.  wishes  citizens  armed  43,  report  of  com.  47,  Mason 
makes  trip  with  Goodwin,  recommends  companies  of  Ari- 
zona troops  183,  McDowell  commends  Arizona  Vols.  191, 
Sanford's  exped.  against  Apaches  196,  report  of  Halleck  203, 
Jones  criticises  military  operations  206,  McDowell's  reply 
215,  exped.  descr.  by  McDowell  219,  location  of  troops  in 
Ariz.  236,  Gregg's  order  242,  McDowell  countermands  246, 
McDowell's  2d  report  250,  Halleck's  report  261,  Ord's  report, 
desertions  269,  Devin's  report  271,  Mason  succeeded  by  Wal- 
len and  Lovell,  Gregg  and  Crittenden,  Ariz,  declared  military 
district  by  Halleck  298,  McDowell  succeeded  by  Ord  302, 
Alexander  confers  with  Del-Shay  and  Skivit.kill  304. 

V.  6,  Rusling  inspects  posts  1,  expeds.  against  Indians  36. 

V,  7,  early  commanders  1. 

V.  8,  Thomas  relieves  Halleck  21,  Ord  takes  command  dept.  of 
Ariz.  22,  Devin's  report  23,  expeds.  against  Indians  24,  Barry 
disobeys  order  57,  Thomas'  report  78,  Ord's  report  79,  Wheel- 
er's exped.  86,  cost  of  supplies  in  Ariz.  87,  policy  of  ex- 
termination 91,  descr.  by  Banta  93,  Stoneman  assigned  to 
dept.  command  96,  refuses  Safford's  request  for  supplies 
107-8,  activities  111,  Stoneman  succeeded  by  Crook  199, 
fights   with    Indians   208. 


Militia — v.  8,  Gov.  Safford  issues  call  108-9. 

Mill  City — V.  6,  flouring  mill  98,  early  residents   100,   fight  with 

W.    Phoenix   for   location    of   townsite    101.    Buker    1st   post- 

riiaster  119,  desc.   123. 
Miller,  Maj. — v.  8,  soldiers  killed  by  Indians  136. 
Miller,   Henry — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 
Miller,  J.  L. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 

38 


Miller,  Jake — v.  5,  defends  Burnt  ranch  against  Indians  311, 
V.  6,  87. 

Miller,  Jno.— v.  4,   129. 

Miller,  Jno.  1. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 

Miller,  Ninian — v.  4,  early  Mormon  settler  276. 

Miller,  Samuel  C. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242,  bio.  257,  kills 
Wauba  Yuba  258,  v.  3,  ranch  32,  attacked  by  Apaches  255, 
V.  5,  Indians  attack  ranch,  defense  by  Mrs.  Miller  300. 

Miller,  Wm.— v.  6,  95. 

Miller,  Winchester— v.  6,  95,  bio.   104. 

Miller  Brothers — v.  6,  early  freighters  216. 

Milligan,  Wm.  R. — v.  6,  pioneer  of  Round  valley  276. 

Mills — V.  4,  est.  steam  grist  mill  at  Pima  villages  17. 

Mills,  Dr. — V.  2,  interested  in  Stevenson  mine  74. 

Mills,  J.  S.— V.  4,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Mills  and  Stevens— v.  2,  killed  156. 

Mimbreno  Apache — v.  2,  on  warpath  30,  v.  7,  17-18. 

"Miner" — v.  8,  desc.  trip  through  Indian  country  117,  prints  peti- 
tion to  Pres.  with  list  of  301  names  of  those  killed  by  Indians 
124. 

Mineral  City — v.  3,  afterward  Ehrenberg  152,  v.  4,  9,  256. 


Mines  and  Mining — v.  1,  1st  disc,  by  Espejo  29,  by  Onate  43, 
Santa  Rita  copper  mine  94,  116-7.  gold  disc,  near  camp  of 
Boundary  Commission  Survey  227,  explorations  for  mines 
277,  Ariz.  Mining  &  Trading  Co.  organized,  explor.  party  sent 
to  Ajo  copper  mine,  ordered  out  by  Mex.  278,  mines  near 
Tucson  and  San  Xavier,  Sonora  Exploring  &  Mining  co. 
organized,  hq.  Tubac  279,  Heintzelman  mine  287-8,  1st  mining 
machinery  in  Ariz.  289,  camps  abandoned  after  withdrawal 
of  troops  291,  Patagonia  mine  disc,  confiscated  by  Carleton 
and  owner  arrested  292,  gold  placers  on  Gila  296,  disc,  gold 
placers  at  La  Paz  by  Pauline  Weaver,  Weaver  diggings, 
Peeples  and  Swilling  297,  arrival  Walker  party,  disc,  placers 
on  Granite  Creek,  Turkey  Creek  and  Big  Bug,  Henry  Wick- 
enburg  disc.  Vulture  mine  298. 

V.  2,  Pumpelly  acct.  of  mine  abandonment  35,  Heintzelman  aban- 
doned 60,  Patagonia  (Mowry)  abandoned  64,  Boundary,  Em- 
pire, Eagle,  St.  Louis,  Compadre,  French,  San  Pedro,  Mon- 
tezuma and  Santa  Rita  mines  71,  Sonora  Exploring  &  Mining 
CO.,  Heintzelman  mine,  Cahuabi,  Arizona  Copper,  Arizona 
Land  &  Mining  co.  72,  Colorado  river  copper  mine,  Steven- 
son Mining  co.,  Harris  mine,  St.  Agustin,  Jackson  quartz 
vein  74,  Santa  Rita  Del  Cobre,  Hanover  copper,  gold  mines 
on  Colorado  and  Gila  rivers  76,  Pauline  Weaver  disc,  placers 
at  Weaver  diggings  293,  297,  Juan  Ferra  disc.  Ferra  Gulch 
294,  Henry  Wickenburg  disc.  Vulture  mine  212,  1st  mining 
dist.  in  Ariz.  245,  Weaver  Creek  disc,  and  named  by  Peeples 
party.  Rich  Hill  disc.  248,  mining  boom  249,  Tip  Top  and 
Swilling  mines  disc.  253,  early  mining  dists.  291. 

V.  3,  report  of  J.  Ross  Browne  and  Jas.  W.  Taylor  on  mineral 
resources  of  Ariz,  and  Cal.  2,  Pishon's  report  on  gold  disc. 
53,  Goodwin's  message  103,  106,  Congress  attempts  to  take 
over  mines  of  Ariz,  and  Mowry  protests  146-7,  letters  W^  T. 
Howell  concerning  148,  descr.  218,  estimate  cost  of  opening 
mine  238. 

V.  4,  disc,  gold  on  Gila  river,  rich  placers  at  Chimney  Peak, 
mining  dists.  of  Yuma  Co.  9,  Mohave  13,  Yavapai  17,  Mont- 
gomery mine  disc,  by  Genung  and  party  37,  Vekol  mine  118-19, 
McCormick's  message  to  Leg.   177,  3d   Leg.  repeals  part  of 

39 


Howell  Code  providing  for  location  of  Ter.  claims  185,  Stowe 
prospects  in  near  Globe  279,  copper  deposits  at  Clifton  280, 
Capt.  Hardy's  prospecting  exped..  Vulture  280,  mineral  wealth 
of  Ter.  told  by  jMcCormick  282. 

V.  5,  mentioned  by  McCormick  8,  in  message  to  5th  Leg.  2)7 . 

V.  6,  Vulture  24,  mines  around  Prescott  32,  Silver  King  disc,  by 
Sullivan  58,  by  Copeland  and  associates  60,  in  Surv.  Gen. 
Wasson's  report  312. 


Ming,  Daniel  H.— v.  6,  bio.  280-81. 

Missions,  Spanish— v.  1,  41,  55-7,  61,  73,  v.  3,  61,  72>,  v.  4,  6,  v.  7, 
298. 

Mission  Camp  Massacre — v.  8,  committed  by  Mex.  201. 

Mitchell,  J.  E.  G. — v.  6,  1st  carriage  factory  in  Phoenix  214. 

Mitchler,  Lt.  N. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey 
188. 

Moffet,  C.  R.— v.  7,  descr.  social  dance  of  Hopi  151,  152. 

Mogollon  Apache — v.  7,  16. 

Mogollon,  Juan  Ignacio  Flores — v.  7,  early  Gov.  of  N.  M.  16-17. 

Mohave — v.  1,  visited  by  Onate  49,  purchase  Olive  Oatman  from 
Apaches  259,  on  war-path  with  Yuma  against  Maricopa  262, 
v.  2,  on  war-path  30,  Ives  notes  change  of  feeling  towards 
whites  56,  subjugation  56,  v.  4,  Iretaba's  tribes  on  Colorado 
river  res.  121,  gathered  on  Colorado  river  res.  by  Genung 
315,  V.  5,  on  war-path  241-42,  make  treaty  with  Supt.  Dent 
244,  V.  7,  war  with  whites  2,  hist.,  etc.,  228,  v.  8,  res.  6. 

Mohave-Apache — See  Apache-Mohave. 

Mohave  City — v.  4,  11,   12. 

Mohave  County — v.  3,  estab.  by  1st  Leg.  93,  v.  4,  11,  part  an- 
nexed to  Nev.  202. 

Mohave,  Fort — See  Ft.  Mohave. 

Mohlhausen,  H.  B. — v.  1,  member  Whipple's  party  266, 

Molino,  Jose — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 

Monihon,  Jas.  D.— v.  6,  94,  in  early  Phoenix  200,  202. 

Monroe,  Paymaster — v,  8,  124. 

Monterde,  Gen.  Mariano — v,  1,  Comr.  from  Mex.  arranges  details 
sale  of  Ter.  to  U.  S.  190. 

Monterey  Ditch  Co. — v.  6,  notice  of  approp.  of  water  from  Salt 
river  90-91. 

Montezuma — v.  3,  original  building  erected  in  Prescott  213,  v.  6, 
profile  on  mountain  66-67,  v.  7,  legend  308. 

Montezuma  Mine — See  Empire. 

Montgomery,  Jno. — v.  4,  early  settler  on  San  Pedro  247. 

Montgomery,  Jno.  B. — v.  6,  purchases  Darrell  Duppa's  place  in 
Salt  River  valley  75,  95,  townsite  comr.  at  Phoenix  181. 

Montgomery  Mine — v.  4,  disc,  by  Genung  37. 

Moon,  Jno.— V.  6,  95,  123. 

Moore,  Capt. — y.  8,  fight  with  Indians  208. 

Moore,  A.  Jno.— v.  4,  184. 

Moore,  Con. — v.  3,  attacked  by  Apache  255. 

Moore,  Lt.  J.  N. — v.  2,  early  owner  in  Mowry  mine  68. 

Moore,  Jas.  A.— v.  3,  80,  v.  6,  66. 

Moore,  Mrs.  Jas.  A. — v.  6,  208. 

Moore,  Johnnie — v.  6,  100. 

Moore,  Mary  E. — v.  6,  208. 

Moore,  Sarah  J.— v.  6,  226. 

Moore  &  Carr — v.  6,  232. 

Moqui — See  Hopi. 

Moran,  Peter — v.  7,  Snake  dance  of  Hopi  179. 

More,  Jas. — v.  4,  46. 

40 


Moreas,  Antonio — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71. 

Moreno,  Padre — v.  1,  killed  by  Yuma  74. 

Morgan,  David— v.  8,  294. 

Morgan,  Henry — v.  6,  conducts  trading  post  near  Maricopa 
Wells  65,  183,  205-6. 

Al organ,  Wm. — v.  6,  124. 

Mormons — v.  1,  said  to  have  furnished  Navajo  with  arms  315, 
V.  2,  expeds.  24,  25,  relations  with  Mohave  56,  v.  3,  estab. 
Callville  252,  v.  4,  estab.  St.  Thomas,  St.  Joseph  and  Overton 
275,  settlements  abandoned  275-6,  v.  6,  purchase  water  rights 
and  lands  on  Little  Colorado  288,  v.  7,  exped.  to  Hopi  145. 

Mormon  Battalion — v.  1,  130,  arrive  at  Santa  Fe  136,  march  to 
Pacific  under  Cooke  137-8,  route,  guides,  etc.,  138,  meet  with 
Mex.  soldiers,  capture  Tucson  140,  visited  by  Pima  143,  camp 
at  villages  of  Maricopa  145,  cross  Colorado  146. 

Morrell,  Matthew  R.— v.  6,  95. 

Morrell,  Wm.  W.— v.  6,  95. 

Morris,  Mark— v.  6,  94,  v.  8,  294. 

Morrow,  Pvt — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Morse,  Henry  D. — v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215. 

Morton,  Lt. — v.  8,  joins  citizen  exped.  against  Indians  174. 

Mott,  Sergt.  Jno.— v.  8,  166. 

Mowry,  Chas. — v.  2,  supt.  Mowry  mine  69. 

Mowry,  Geo.  E.— v.  6,  100,  133,  193. 

Mowry,  Sylvester — v.  1,  desc.  Heintzelman  mine  289,  owns  and 
re-names  Patagonia  mine,  property  confiscated  293,  his  story 
294,  desc.  gold  placers  on  Gila  296,  provisional  delegate  to 
Congress,  publishes  map  of  Ariz.  324-5,  resident  of  Tucson 
345,  duel  with  Cross  352,  v.  2,  16,  owner  Mowry  mine  69, 
arrest  by  Carleton  102.  his  story  109,  opinion  of  Indians  143, 
bio.  207,  gives  presents  Pima  and  Maricopa  29,  mine  208, 
owner  in  Colorado  river  copper  mine  74,  v.  3,  protests  against 
attempts  of  Congress  to  take  over  mines  of  Ariz,  and  Colo. 
146-7,  227,  V.  8,  124. 

Mowry  City — v.  2,  76. 

Mowry  Mine — v.  1,  1st  named  "Patagonia"  292,  confiscation  293, 
V.  2,  16,  desc.  64,  early  owners  68. 

Mulholland,  W.  J.— v.  6,  137. 

Muller,  Lt. — v.  2,  in  fight  at  Apache  Pass  139. 

Munroe,  Geo. — v.  2,  companion  of  Swilling  254,  v.  8,  trails  par- 
ticipants Wickenburg  massacre  290. 

Murders  and  Raids — v.  4,  by  Mexicans  48,  66,  69,  70. 

Murphy — v.  8,  guide  in  exped.  against  Indians  112. 

Murphy,  Pvt.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians   130. 

Murphy,  Jas. — v.  6,  94. 

Murphy  &  Dennis — v.  6,  early  merchants  in  Phoenix  175,  freight- 
ers 216. 

Murray,  Anna  D. — v.  2.  268. 

Murra}',  Frank — v.  8,  315. 

Murray,  Jas.   F. — v.  6,  94. 

Murray,  Matilda — v.  6,  marriage  to  Geo.  Buck  1st  in  Phoenix 
222,  223. 

Murray.  Wm.  P. — v.  6,  94. 

Murray,  Wm.  R.— v.  3,  80. 

Myers-  v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  141. 

N 

Nachis — v.  2,  son  of  Cochise,  kills  Esquinay  239. 
Nannelity — v.  3,  Navajo  chief  42. 
Napier,  Andrew — v.  4,  304. 

41 


Narbona — v.  1,  Navajo  chief  307. 
Narvaez — v.   1,  exped.    1. 


Navajo — v.  1,  customs,  etc.,  300,  unfriendly,  expeds.  under  Doni- 
phan, Walker,  Newby  and  Washington  306,  raids  307,  treaty 
with  Sumner  and  Calhoun,  Sumner  marches  against  308,  kill 
Martin  and  soldier  at  Ft.  Defiance  309-10,  Kendrick  demands 
restitution  310,  kill  negro  at  Defiance,  campaign  against, 
Miles  commanding  311,  campaign  by  Hatch  314,  supplied 
with  arms  315,  Miles  in  field,  Lindsey's  successful  attack 
316,  subjugation  318. 

V.  2,  exped.  under  Canby  and  Carleton  162,  attack  Ft.  Defiance 
163,  Kit  Carson's  campaign  164,  Carleton's  desc.  165,  depre- 
dation 166,  desc.  of  Canyon  de  Chelly,  stronghold  of  Navajo 
167,  removal  to  Bosque  Redondo  171,  number  173,  suffering 
176,  begin  to  leave,  Dolittle,  Foster  and  Rose  make  investiga- 
tion 178,  Sherman  and  Tappan  agree  to  return  them  to  their 
country  179,  removal  to  present  res.,  friendly  and  self-sup- 
porting   180. 

V.  3,  attack  and  rob  exped.  sent  to  estab.  Ft.  Whipple  43,  v.  5, 
peace  made  by  Jacob  Hamblin  328,  v,  7,  hist,  etc.,  36,  v.  8, 
placed  on  res.  5. 


Navajo  Springs — v.  3,  gubernatorial  party  arrives  and  formally 
organizes  Ter.  65,  69. 

Navigation — v.  1,  Wilcox  &  Johnson  reach  mouth  of  Colorado 
251-2,  Turnbull  brings  1st  steamer  to  Colorado,  other  ves- 
sels 252. 

Nelson,  Lt. — v.  3,  officer  with  exped.  to  estab.  military  post  31. 

Nelson,  Jas. — v.  6,  early  settler  in  Salt  River  valley,  killed  by 
Jim   Smith  81. 

Nelson,  Peter — v.  6,  95. 

Nelson,  Capt.  Wm. — v.  8,  refuses  to  allow  band  of  armed  citizens 
to  cross  res.  214,  receives  Vincent  Colyer  230. 

Netterville,  Capt.  W.  Mc. — v.  8,  interviews  with  Indian  chiefs  267. 

Newberry,   Dr. — v.  2,   member  Ives'  party  19. 

Newby,  Col. — v.  1,  exped.  against  Navajo  307. 

New  Mexico — v.  1,  desc.  by  Pike  81,  principal  towns  occupied  by 
Kearny,  civil  govt,  estab.  and  code  of  laws  adopted,  Ter.  or- 
ganization estab.  133,  revolt  of  natives  put  down  by  Price 
147,  leaders  and  their  fates,  submission    148. 

Newspapers,  Pioneer — v.  1,  1st  352,  v.  3,  31,  46,  194,  see  also 
under  Arizona  Miner,  and  Arizonian. 

Nigger  Well— v.  4,  69. 

Nix,  Robt.— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 

Noble,  Chas. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 

Norris,  Coleman — v.  6,  259. 

Norton,  Supt.  A.  B. — v.  2,  report  on  Navajo  178. 

Novinger,  Simon — v.  6,  bio.  271-2. 

Noyes,  A.  O. — v.  2,  recorder  of  Quartz  Mountain  mining  dist. 
320,  V.  8,  record  of  over  300  men  killed  by  Indians  104. 

Noyes,  E.  S.— v.  3,  80. 

Nuestra  Senora  de  Los  Dolores — v.  1,  mission  estab.  by  Padre 
Kino  56. 

Nunez,  Ventura — v.  8,  Mex.  outlaw,  lynched  207. 

Nutrioso — V.  6,  294. 

O 

O'Beirne,  Capt. — v.  8,  at  camp  Date  Creek  283. 

O'Brien,  F.  H.— v.  4,  281. 

Ochoa,  Sergt. — v.  4,  member  Arizona  Vols.  108. 

42 


Ochoa,  Estevan — v.  1,  resident  of  Tucson  345,  v,  2,  bio.  203, 
V.  5,  member  5th  Leg.  from  Pima  co.  S3,  v.  6,  124. 

Ochoa,  Maria  Antonia — v.  2,  284. 

Oconor,  Inspector  Hugo — v.  1,  orders  Presidio  of  Tubac  trans- 
ferred to  Tucson  74. 

Odd  Fellows,  Independent  Order  of — v.  6,  1st  lodge  in  Ter.  and 
1st  in  Phoenix  227. 

O'Donnell — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  137. 

O'Donnell,  Jno. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 

Old  Fort  Misery — v.  3,  1st  boarding  house  for  miners  in  Pres- 
cott  212. 

Old  Spanish  Trail— v.  1,  estab.  by  WolfskiU  99. 

O'Leary,  Dan— v.  8,  303. 

Olive  City— V.  4,  9,  34. 

Oliver — v.  8,  murdered  by  Mex.  at  Mission  camp  201. 

Olvany,  Jno.  M. — v.  6,  1st  postmaster  at  Phoenix  99,  221,  suc- 
ceeded by  W.  A.  Hancock  221. 

Onate,  Juan  De — v.  1,  colonizer  of  N.  M.  30,  founds  2d  town  in 
U.  S.,  subdues  Indians  at  Acoma,  makes  entrada  in  Nebr., 
marches  to  Gulf  of  California  and  returns,  founds  Santa  Fe, 
2d  exped.,  succeeded  by  Peralta  31,  32,  50,  delay  35,  reaches 
Conchas  38,  founds  1st  church  in  N.  M.  39,  receives  submis- 
sion of  Indians  4L  mines  disc.  43,  Acoma  chief  revolts  44, 
.  exped.  against  Acomas  45,  destruction  of  their  pueblo  46, 
western  exped.,  visits  Zuni  and  Hopi  and  crosses  Little  Colo- 
rado and  Verde  48,  follows  Colorado  river  and  names  port 
at  mouth  49,  returns  to  Mex.  50,  v.  7,  139. 

O'Neill,  Wm.  J.— v.  6,  124. 

Opata — v.  1,  3,  10,  organized  as  allies  by  the  Spaniards  68. 

Oraibi,  San  Francisco  de — v.  1,  early  Spanish  mission  55. 

Orantia,  Ignacio — v.  1,  1st  Lt.  Gov.  of  Ariz.  325. 

Ord,  Gen.  E.  O.  C. — v.  5,  reports  conditions  in  Ariz.  1868  269, 
succeeds  McDowell  and  announces  Indian  policy  302,  v.  8, 
commands  dept.  of  Ariz.  21,  22,  report  on  conditions  79, 
commands  dept.  of  Pacific  93. 

Organic  Act — v.  3,  text  85. 

Orme,  Lindley  H.— v.  6,  95. 

Ortiz — V.  1,  leads  revolt  against  Americans  in  N.  M.  148. 

Ortiz,  Jesus— V.  1,  210. 

Ory,  Capt.  Wm. — v.  8,  conducts  exped.  into  Indian  country  116. 

Osborn,  David — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Osborn,  Jno.  B.— v.  3,  94. 

Osborn,  Jno.  P. — v,  3,  early  settler  in  Prescott  211,  v.  4,  member 
Wells  &  Osborn  co.  268,  bio.  268-9,  v.  6,  95,  appointed  town- 
site  comr.  at  Phoenix  181. 

Osborn,  Jno.  W.— v.  4,  184. 

Osborn,  Louisa  A. — v.  2,  1st  wife  of  Jno.  T.  Alsap  268. 

Osborn,  Neri — v.  3,  messenger  Council  1st  Leg.  94,  v.  4,  184,  v,  6, 
story  of  location  Phoenix  99. 

Osborn,  Sidney  O.— v.  4,  269. 

Osborn,  W.  J. — v.  2,  wounded  by  Apaches,  one  cause  Camp  Grant 
massacre  281,  v.  3,  79,  v.  4,  165,  v.  8,  mules  stolen  by  Indians 
139. 

Osborn,  W.  L.— v.  2,  267,  v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215,  v.  6,  95. 

Otero,  Antonio  Jesus — v.  1,  early  judge  in  N.  M.  under  American 
rule  133. 

Otero,  Jesus — v.  6,  early  resident  Phoenix  180. 

Ott,  Charley— V.  3,  37. 

Otterman,  Tom— v.  4,  328. 

43 


Oury,  Granville  H. — v.  1,  1st  chief  justice  of  dist.  court  of  Ariz. 
326,  exped.  with  Tozer  to  join  Crabb  in  Mex.  329,  resident 
Tucson  345,  v.  2,  owner  in  Jackson  mine  75,  delegate  to 
Confed.  Congress  86,  97,  bio.  282,  v.  4,  165,  184,  v.  6,  120. 

Oury,  Wm.  S. — v.  1,  resident  of  Tucson  345,  v.  2,  bio.,  connection 
with  Camp  Grant  massacre  269,  visits  Stoneman  to  protest 
lack  military  protection  272,  takes  active  part  in  massacre 
280,  indicted  but  released,  death  282,  v.  4,  3d  Leg.  authorized 
Atty.  Gen.  to  pay  for  arms,  etc.,  belonging  to  Ter.  190,  v.  5, 
connection  with  Camp  Grant  massacre  291,  v.  8,  153,  158,  159. 

Outlaws — v.  6,  in  early  days  292. 

Overland  Mail  Company — v.  2,  see  Butterfield  stage  line. 

Overton — v.   4,    early    Mormon    settlement  275. 

Owen,  Jno. — v.  5,  34. 

Owens,  J.  A.— V.  3,  80. 

Owings,  Dr.  L.  S. — v.  1,  chosen  for  Gov.  at  constitutional  con- 
vention held  at  Tucson  325. 

P 

Pacheco,    Francisco — v.    1,   205. 

Pacheco,  Ynacio — v.  1,  resident  of  Tucson  349. 

Page,  Mrs. — v.  2,  daughter  of  Jas.  Pennington,  capture  by  Indians 

and  escape  199,  v.  4,  53. 
Pah-Ute— See  Piute. 
Pah-Ute   County — v.  4,   created  by  2d   Leg.    155,   annexation   to 

Nev.,  3d  Leg,  asks   Congress  to  repeal  act  202,  v.  6,  larger 

portion  annexed  to  Nev.  and  balance  reverts  to  Mohave  co. 

128-9. 
Paine,  Luther — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 
Painted  Rocks — v.  6,  referred  to  by  Rusling  6. 
Palma — v.    1,    Yuma    chief,    becomes    Christian,    induces    Padre 

Garces  to  estab.  missions  72,  joins  revolt  of  Yuma  resulting 

in  death  of  Garces  and  others  17). 
Palmer,   Capt.   A.   L. — v.  8,   states   Indians   get  arms   from   Hopi 

110-11. 
Palmer,  Dr.  Edwd. — v.  7,  visit  to  Hopi  147. 
Palmer,  Gen.  W.  J. — v.  5,  succeedsWright  in  charge   Kansas  & 

Pacific  ry.'s  surveying   exped.   101,   experience    with   Apache 

in  chasm  in  Mogollons  109. 
"Peace   Commission" — v.  8,   150,   arrival  in  Ariz,   of   Colyer  211, 

report  212,  estab.  res.  at  Camp  Apache  221,  feeling  toward 

"peace  policy"  in  Ariz.  247,  278,  returns  to  Washington  285. 
Pearson,  Jno. — v.  4,  157. 
Pearson,  Richard  E.— y.  6,  179,  246. 
Pearson,  Wm. — v.  8,  killed  b}^  Indians  133. 
Peck,  Ed.  G. — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249,  bio.  262,  disc.  Peck  mine 

263,  V.  3,  member  Woolsey  exped,  275. 
Pedro,  Padre — v.  1,  resident  of  Tucson  349. 
Peeples,  A.   H. — v.   1,   one  disc,  of  Weaver  diggings  and  Creek 

297,    V.    2,    organized    Peeples    party    247,    names    Antelope 

Creek  and  Peak  247,  Rich  Hill  248,  v.  4,  46,  v.  6,  90,  193. 
Peeples  Valley— v.  4,  271. 
Pelet,  Julius — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 
Penitentiaries — v.  4,  act  by  Congress  providing  201,  v.  5,  5th  Leg. 

asks    Congress    concerning   43. 
Penn,  Capt.— v.  8,   160. 

Pennington,  E.  C— v.  5.  killed  by  Indians  319,  v.  8,  137,  164. 
Pennington,  Green — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  319. 
Pennington,  Jas. — v.  2,  bio.  199,  v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  137. 
Pennington,  Jno. — v,  4,  2>7 ,  44. 

44 


Pennington  Family — v.  1,  early  residents  Tucson  345,  v.  2,  199, 
V.  4,  53. 

Peonage — v.  2,  79,  Carleton's  testimony  164,  v.  3,  Goodwin's  mes- 
sage 98. 

Peralta,  Miguel  A. — v.  6,  early  merchant  Phoenix  203. 

Peralta,  Pedro  De — v.  1,  supersedes  Onate  31,  50. 

Peralta-Reavis — v.  2,  land  claim  285. 

Perkins,  Chas.  R.— v.  6,  96. 

Pesquiera — v.  8,  attacked  by  Indians  138. 

Pesquiera,  Gov.  Ignacio — v.  1,  induces  Crabb  to  take  exped.  into 
Alex.  327,  v.  4,  seeks  refuge  from  French  190-1,  v.  8,  gives 
protection  to  Mex.  201. 

Peterson,  Neils— v.  6,  96,  bio.  111-2. 

Peterson,  Oliver — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  134. 

Pfeiffler,  Capt.  Albert  H. — v.  2,  with  Kit  Carson's  exped.  against 
Navajo  169-70,  v.  3,  tight  with  Indians  284. 

Phelps,  Edwd. — v.  4,  appointed  marshal  of  Ter.  166. 

Phillips — v.  1,  purchased  interest  in  Vulture  mine  299. 

Phillips,  B. — V.  2,  partner  Herman  Ehrenberg  193. 

Phillips,  Chas.  A.— v.  3,  80. 

Phillips,  Maj.  Jas.  A. — v.  3,  escorts  gubernatorial  party  to  Ft. 
Union   68. 

Phillips,  Jno.  H.--V.  6,   124. 

Phoenix — v.  2,  named  by  Swilling  at  suggestion  of  Darrell  Duppa 
253,  V.  6,  location  of  townsite  99,  fight  with  E.  Phoenix  for  lo- 
cation 101,  sale  of  lots  and  blocks  102,  official  naming  by 
Truman  112,  selection  of  townsite  and  sale  of  lots  158,  Wm. 
Smith  1st  merchant  174,  others  175,  townsite  comrs.  181, 
1st  churches  235,  1st  schools  242,  1st  school  building  246-7. 

Phoenix  Ditch  Company — v.  6,  notice  approp.  water  from  Salt 
river   85. 

Phoenix,  Jno. — v.  1,  see  Lt.  Derby. 

Phoenix  Settlement — v.  6,  named  by  Darrell  Duppa  74. 

Phy,  Joe— V.  4,  fight  with  Indians  135,  death  135,  v.  6,  90,  v.  8, 
cattle  stolen  by  Indians  134,  kills  suspected  participants  in 
Wickenburg  massacre  301. 

Piatt,   Robt.   F.— V.  4,  165. 

Picacho — V.  2,  only  fight  between  Union  troops  and  Confed.  in 
Ariz.  88. 

Picacho  Mine — v.  2,  193. 

Pierce,  Dep.  Sur.  Wm.  H. — v.  4,  contracts  for  survey  of  lands  303, 
estab.  "initial  point"  303-4,  lacks  military  protection  304,  re- 
port on  Salt  river  305. 

Pierson,  J.  H.— v.  6,  184. 

Pike,  Lt.  Zebulon  M. — v.  1,  breaks  Santa  Fe  trail  80. 

Pima — V.  1,  3,  visit  by  Padre  Kino  57,  2d  revolt  62,  allies  of  Span- 
ish 69,  organized  as  allies  at  Presidio  of  Tubac  75,  meetings 
with  Kearny  135,  honesty,  visit  Cooke's  camp  143,  desc.  by 
Cooke  144,  assist  Maricopa  against  other  tribes  262,  v.  2, 
assist  Maricopa  27,  attacked  by  other  tribes,  survey  of  lands 
and  distribution  of  presents,  civilization  29,  armed  by  Indian 
Agt.  Lyons  against  Apache  152,  v.  3,  Poston's  speech  in 
Congress  160,  v.  4,  in  Gila  valley  16,  friendly  21,  company 
in  Arizona  Vols.  96,  v.  6,  desc.  by  Rusling  8,  v.  7,  hist.,  etc.,  234. 

Pima  County — v.  3,  estab.  by  1st  Leg.  93,  v.  4,  in  1865  4,  Indians 
friendly  21. 

Pima  and  Maricopa — v.  8,  res.  set  aside  3. 

Pimeria — v.  1,  name  suggested  for  Arizona  322. 

Pinal — v.  1,  capture  Inez  Gonzales  201,  desc.  206,  v.  2,  on  war- 
path 30. 

45 


Pinal  Apache — v.  7,  wars  with  whites  2. 

Final  County — v.  6,  1st  efforts  to  create  57,  bill  to  create  in  6th 
Leg.  125,  substitute  bill  creating  Maricopa  co.  127. 

Pinal  Coyotero  Apache — v.  7,  14,  15. 

Pinaleno  Apache — v.  7,  15. 

Pinole  Treaty — v.  2,  killing  of  Apaches  by  Woolsey  218,  v.  3, 
desc.  by  Mike  Burns  304. 

Pinos  Altos — V.  2,  placer  mines  75,  Apaches  attack  123. 

Pioncenay  and  Piarhel — v.  2,  kill  Rogers  and  Spence  238,  Pion- 
cenay  shot  239,  escapes  239. 

Pioneer   Mining  District — v.  2,   formation  304. 

Piper,  O.  E. — v.  8,  agt.  southern  Apaches  218. 

Pishon,  Capt.  Al.  J. — v.  2,  commands  soldiers,  visits  Walker  party 
246,  V.  3,  commands  Carleton's  exped.  to  Ariz.  3,  6,  7,  reports 
to  Carleton  26,  with  exped.  to  estab.  military  post  31,  report 
on  gold  tields  53,  report  on  country  54. 

Piute — V.  5,  mentioned  by  McCormick  as  hostile  2,  v.  7,  hist.  313. 

Place,  Lafayette — v.  4,  184. 

Planchas  de  Plata — v.  1,  66,  redisc.  by  Arizona  Mining  &  Trading 
CO.  278. 

Planet  Mine — v.  2,  disc,  by  Ryland  296. 

Piatt,  Mortimer  R.— v.  4,  165,  v.  5,  1. 

Poindexter — v.  4,  mail  carrier,  tight  with  Indians  133. 

Pollock,  Lt.  Col. — V.  4,  command  at  Ft.  Goodwin  126. 

Pomeroy,  Lt. — v.  3,  with  exped,  to  estab.  military  post  31. 

Ponce— V.  1,  Apache  chief  211,  218. 

Pope,  W.  H. — V.  6,  pioneer  barber  of  Phoenix  193. 

Population— V.    3.    251,    v.    4.    in    1866-7    251. 

Porras,  Padre  Francisco — v.  1,  poisoned  by  Indians  55,  v.  7, 
missionary  to  Hopi   140. 

Porter — v.  1,  member  Arizona  Mining  &  Trading  co.'s  explor, 
party  278. 

Porter,  Lt.  D.  D. — v.  1,  commissioned  to  bring  camels  to  U.  S.  354. 

Poss,  Lt.  J.  M. — V.  8,  in  exped.  against  Indians  113. 

Postle,  Robt.— V.  8,  187. 

Postle's  Ranch — v.  4,  settlement  276. 

Poston,  Chas.  D. — v.  1,  director  and  mgr.  Sonora  Exploring  & 
Mining  co.  280,  desc.  life  at  Tubac  281,  desc.  survey  of  Yuma 
319,  early  resident  344,  v.  2,  43,  abandons  Heintzelman  mine 
60,  director  Heintzelman  mine  72,  bio.  190,  active  part  in  or- 
ganization of  Ter.  321,  1st  supt.  Indian  affairs  of  Ter.  325, 
v.  3,  1st  delegate  to  Congress  87,  88,  activities  153,  speech 
in  Congress  156,  v.  4,  defeated  for  delegate  to  Congress  148, 
again  defeated  164,  312,  v.  6,  attempts  to  estab.  Parsee  re- 
ligion on  Primrose  Hill,  near  Florence  64,  v.  8,  1st  supt.  of 
Indian  affairs  2. 

Post  Roads — V.  3,  estab.  by  38th  Congress  185. 

Pougeot,  Frank — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 

Powell,  Maj.  J.  W. — v.  5,  exped.  through  Grand  Canyon  referred 
to  by  Rocky  Mountain  Herald  145,  story  of  1st  exped. 
through  Grand  Canyon  169,  distances  traversed  by  180,  181, 
2d  exped.  181,  Jacob  Hamblin  desc.  death  of  three  men  who 
led  in  1st  exped.  through  Canyon  329,  v.  7,  religion  of  Hopi 
161-2. 

Powell,  Capt.  W.  H. — v.  5,  member  Powell's   1st  exped.  180. 

Prentiss,  Edwd.— v.  8,  296. 

Prescott — V.  3,  townsite  named  by  Goodwin  31,  32,  surveyed  by 
Van  C.  Smith  and  R.  W.  Groom  31,  1st  mail  from  La  Paz 
36,  selected  as  capital  by  Goodwin  188,  early  days  189, 
naming  192,  names  of  streets,  sale  of  lots  193,  1st  hotel  and 

46 


restaurant  195-6,  1st  store,  1st  saloon,  Sunday  school  196,  day 
schoal,  1st  Alcalde  197,  1st  Leg.  convened  198,  1st  election, 
1st  public  building  199,  1st  child  born,  1st  clergyman,  1st 
ball,  1st  boarding  house  212,  desc.  by  Rusling  214,  by  Jos. 
Fish  214-15,  1st  saloon  215,  1st  sawmill  216,  v.  4,  desc.  18, 
located  and  named  by  Goodwin  58,  surveyed  58,  desc.  by  Tru- 
man 256,  desc.  in  San  Francisco  Examiner  258,  v.  6,  desc.  by 
Rusling  31. 

Prescott  Ditch  Company — v.  6,  notice  of  approp.  water  from  Salt 
river  87,  88. 

Price — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians   137. 

Price,  Col.  Sterling — v.  1,  commands  in  Mex.  campaign  130,  com- 
mand of  N.  M.  147,  quells  revolt  of  natives  147,  v.  5,  com- 
mended by  4th  Leg.  18,  commands  exped.  against  Indians 
222,  says  Yavapai  and  Walapai  most  hostile  tribes  222,  men- 
tioned by  McDowell  256,  war-path  against  Walapai  294,  v.  8, 
scout  against  Indians  24. 

Priest,  J.  T.— V.  6,  early  settler  in  Tempe  109,  bio.  110,  111. 

Printing  Press — v.  3,  brought  to  Ter.  by  McCormick  and  used 
printing  Arizona  Miner  31,  46,  93. 

Prison,  Territorial — v.  5,  act  passed  by  5th  Leg.  to  estab.  at  or 
near  Phoenix  87. 

Proclamations — v.  3,  by  Goodwin,  organizing  Ter.  70,  municipal- 
ity Tucson  71,  judicial  dists.  72,  ordering  election  for  dele- 
.  gates  to  Congress  and  members  Leg.  and  specifying  elec- 
tion dists.  75. 

Puerta  De  La  Purisima  Concepcion — v.  1,  mission  estab.  on  Colo- 
rado by  Padre  Garces  1Z. 

Pulteney,   Ely — v.   3,   34. 

Pumpelly,  Raphael — v.  1,  escapes  from  Ariz,  when  U.  S.  with- 
draws troops  292,  v.  2,  desc.  ill  treatment  of  Cochise  2>'h,  acct. 
abandonment  of  mines  35,  metallurgist  Santa  Rita  Mining 
CO.   33,   72. 

Purcella,   F.— v.  8,  294. 

Purdy,  Lt. — v.  5,  commands  exped.  against  Indians  219. 

Q 

Quartz  Mountain  Mining  District — v.  2,  formation  315. 

Quiburi — v.  5,  near  Tombstone,  reached  by  Padre  Kino  59. 

Quiburi,  Rio  (San  Pedro  river) — v.  1,  reached  by  Padre  Kino  59. 

Quivira — v.  1,  fabulous  stories  concerning  told  to  the  Spanish  24. 

R 

Railroads — v.  3,  in  Goodwin's  message  109,  Arizona  Ry.  incor- 
porated by  1st  Leg.  138-9,  v.  4,  Congress  asked  by  2d  Leg. 
for  grant  to  La  Paz  and  Prescott  Ry.  162,  grants  lands  to  aid 
Atlantic  and  Pacific  Ry.  199-200. 

Railroads  and  Telegraphs — v.  5,  in  McCormick's  message  to  5th 
Leg.  35. 

Rainer,  Wm.— v.  4,  130. 

Ralston,  Clayton  M. — ^y.  3,  assist,  clerk  House  1st  Leg.  94,  v.  4, 
settler  in  Verde  valley  215. 

Ralston,  Jack — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  241. 

Ralston,  Mrs. — v.  8,  robbed  by  Indians  144. 

Ramirez,  Roque — v.  4,  Arizona  Vol.,  killed  by  Indians  104. 

Ramstein,  Jake — v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215. 

Randall — v.  2,  early  owner  in  Mowry  mine  68. 

Ravena,  Manuel — v.  4,  149. 

Raymond — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  128-9. 

Read.  Rev.   H.  W, — v.  3,  organizes   1st  Sunday  school   in   Pres- 


cott 196. 


47 


Reavis  Land  Claim — See  Peralta-Reavis. 

Redmond — v.  8,  post  trader  at  Camp  Apache  killed  by  Indians  146. 

Redondo,  Jose  M. — v.  1,  investigates  gold  placers  at  La  Paz  297, 

V.  2,  296,  V.  3,  elected  1st  Leg.  89,  not  citizen,   resigns   117, 

V.  4,  297. 
Reed— V.  1,  331. 

Regan,  Benj.  W. — v.  6,  early  owner  in  Silver  King  mine  60. 
Reid — V,  8,  murdered  Sy  Mex.  at  Mission  camp  201. 
Revlin,   Mark — v.  8,  mail  carrier,  killed  by  Indians   147. 
Reyes,  Manuel — v.  8,  Mex.  outlaw  shot  by  Americans  203. 
Rhodes,  Bill— v.  2,  fight  with  Apaches  53,  54. 
Rice,  Capt.  Daniel — v.  3,  with  escort  of  gubernatorial  party  68. 
Rice,  Willard— V.  3,  killed  by  Indians  329. 
Rich  Hill — V.  2,  disc,  of  gold  and  naming  248. 
Richards,  Hugo — v.  4,  one  organizer  Bank  of  Arizona  at  Fres- 
co tt  270. 
Richardson,  Chas.  H.— v.  8,  294. 
Richardson,  Marvin  M. — v.  5,  2. 

Richardson,  Steve — v.  3,  builds  home  Arizona  Miner  206. 
Richmond,  Jas. — v.  6,  killed  by  Indians  290. 
Richmond,  Jonathan — v.  3,  member  gubernatorial  party  47,  letters 

desc.  conditions  218,  estimate  cost  opening  mine  238,  returns 

east  246. 
Rickman,  Alonzo — v.   4,   129. 
Rico,  Jose — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 
Rigg,    Col.    Edwd.   A. — v.   3,    instructions    from    Carleton    10,    11, 

Woolsey's  report  265. 
Riggs,  B.  F.— V.  6,  89,  90. 
Riggs,  Frank — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 
Riggs,  Peter — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  141. 

Riley,  Maj. — v.  1,  commands  escort  for  Santa  Fe  caravan  89. 
Riley,  Lieut. — v.  8,  detachment  attacked  by  Indians  145. 
Ritter,  Mrs.  Wayne — v.  2,  born  in  2d  house  in  Phoenix  201. 
Rivera,  Martin — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142, 
Roach,  Jno.— v.  6,  96,   192. 
Robinson — v.  2,  38. 
Robinson,    J.    H. — v.    2,    pilot    of    steamboat    Explorer    on    Ives' 

exped.   20. 
Robinson,  Jas. — v.  4,  215. 

Robinson,  Valentine — v.  1,  1st  Adj.  Gen.  326. 
Roberts,   Lt,   Col.   B.  S. — v.  2,  defeats  attempts   of   Loring  and 

Crittenden  to  induce  Union  troops  to  espouse  Confed.  cause 

84. 
Roberts,  Chas. — v.  4,  129. 
Roberts,  Geo.— v.  6,  96,  193,  215. 

Roberts,  J.  A. — v.  2,  appointed  sheriff  by  Baylor  (Confed.)  85. 
Roberts,  J.  E. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 
Roberts,  Capt.  Thos. — v.  2,  in  command  at  battle  of  Apache  pass 

127. 
Robertson,  Jas.  O. — v.  4,  149. 
Rodenburg,  J.  N.— v.  4,  89. 

Rodgers,  Capt. — v.  2,  explores  Colorado  river  to  Callville  24. 
Rodgers,  Lewis — v.  6,   140. 

Rodrick,  Tom — v.  8,  member  exped.  against  Indians  172. 
Rodriguez — v.  1,  priest  murdered  by  Indians  40. 
Rodriguez,  Francisco — v.  4,  corporal  in  Arizona  Vols.  100. 
Rogers,  Admiral  Robt. — v.  4,  thanked  by  3d  Leg.  193. 
Rogers  and  Smith — v.  8,  attacked  by  Indians  149. 
Rogieri,    Rev.    Donate — v.    4,    early    priest    at    Tucson    and    San 

Xavier  291,  killed  by  Apaches  291. 

48 


Remain,  J. — v.  6,  215. 

Romano,  Ramon — v.  6,  124. 

Ronstadt,    R. — v.    1,    member    Arizona    Mining    &   Trading    co.'s 

explor.  party  278. 
Roper,  Thos.  D.— v.  6,  96. 
Rose,  Rot)t.  A.— V.  4,  157. 
Ross,  Lt.— V.  8,  304. 
Ross,  Maj.  Wm.  J.— v.  8,  167. 

Rotherwell— V.  2,  killed  by  Apaches  281,  v.  8,  164. 
Roulett,  Capt.,  and  brothers — v.  4,  255. 
Roundtree,  Jno. — v.  3,  215,  v.  4,   184. 
Round  Valley — v.  6,  settlers  285. 
Rowe,  Wm. — v.  6,  locates  at  Maryville  232-3,  victim  Indian  raids 

233. 

Rowell,"  Converse  W.  C— v.  3,  80,  v.  4,  149. 

Rowling,  Moritz — v.  6,  96. 

Ruff,  Thos, — V.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215. 

Ruggles,  Col. — V.  8,  horses  stolen  by  Indians  140. 

Ruggles,  Levi — v.  6,  builds  1st  house  in  Florence  48,  register  and 

receiver  of  Land  Office  48,  v.  8,  agt.  for  Pima  4. 
Ruins — V.  6,  ancient  acequias  and  canals  29,  ancient  buildings  30. 
Rumberg,  C.  D. — y.  6,  1st  to  install  machinery  for  grinding  sugar 

cane  215. 
Rumberg,  J.  Dirley — v.  6,  96. 
Russell,  Frank — v.  7,  desc.  r'ima  234. 
Rush,  Judge  Jno.  A. — v.  4,  partner  Judge  E.  W.  Wells  270,  v.  5, 

member  4th  Leg.  2,  bio.  31,  v.  6,  96. 
Rusling,  Gen.  Jas.  E. — v.  3,  Prescott  in  early  days  214,  v.  4,  Ariz. 

in  1866-67  251,  v.  6,  agt.  of  War  Dept.  1,  conditions  2. 
Russell — V.  2,  interested  in  Stevenson  mine  74. 
Russell,  Capt. — v.  8,  fight  with  Indians  208. 
Rutledge,  Thos.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  135. 
Ryan,  Jno. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  128. 
Rykman — v.  3,  killed  by  Indians  256. 
Ryland — v.  2,  disc.  Planet  mine  296. 

S 

Saavedra,  Rafael — v.  4,  killed  by  Indians  131. 

Safford,  Gov.  A.  P.  K. — v.  4,  incorporator  of  Atlantic  &  Pac.  ry. 
199,  V.  5,  arrives  in  Ter.  99,  v.  6,  one  organizer  Salt  River 
Ditch  »o.  87,  signs  bill  creating  Maricopa  co.  127,  appoints 
officials  133,  v.  8,  Gov.  Ariz.  104,  interview  with  N.  Y.  Herald 
105-6,  asks  supplies  for  3  companies  vols.  106-7,  refused  107-8, 
call  for  militia  108-9,  calls  attention  to  Indian  outrages  151, 
proclamation  regarding  "Peace  Commission"  210-11,  crit- 
icised by  Colyer  248-9. 

Sage — V.  4,  killed  by  Indians  137. 

Sage,  Cornelius — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  128. 

Saguaripa,  Jesus — v.  8,  Mex.  outlaw  lynched  205. 

St.  Andrew — v.   1,  see  Missions. 

St.  James — v.  3,  Walker  storekeeper  219. 

St.  James,  Louis — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249,  v.  5,  with  Bentley  when 
Bentley  killed  by  Indians  316. 

St.  John,  Silas — v.  2,  desc.  1st  stage  line  across  Ariz.  1,  pony 
rider  and  mail  carrier  2,  drives  herd  stock  from  Yuma  to 
Maricopa  Wells  3,  attacked  by  Mex.  6. 

St.  Johns— V.  6.  275,  276,  Sol.  Barth  one  of  builders  276,  281. 

St.  Joseph — V.  4,  early  Mormon  settlement  275. 

St.  Louis  Mining  co. — v.  2,  71. 

St.  Thomas — v.  4.  early  Mormon  settlement  275. 

49 


Sallallo,  Jose  Maria— v.  8,  296. 

Salazar,  Juan  Frias  De — v.  1,  visits  to  Onate  Z1 ,  40. 

Salero  Mine — v.  2,  71. 

Salmon,  W.  G. — v.  8,  victim  in  Wickenburg  massacre  290. 

Saloons — v.  6,  number  in  Phoenix  in  1872,  206. 

Salpointe,  Bishop  A.  B. — v,  5,  chaplain  of  Council  5th  Leg.  34. 

Salt  River  Ditch  co. — v.  6,  notice  of  approp.  waters  from  Salt 
river    86. 

Salt  River  Farming  Ditch  co. — v.  6,  notice  of  approp.  waters 
from  Salt  river  89-90. 

Salt  River  Valley — v.  6,  settlement  69,  approp.  of  water  85,  prog- 
ress and  agriculture  137,  1st  harvesting  machines  137,  canals 
and  ditches  146,  progress  228,  early  churches  235,  early 
schools  241. 

Salt  River  Valley  Association — v.  6,  formation,  Jno.  Alsap,  Jas. 
Murphy  and  J.  T.  Perry  appointed  comrs.  to  survey  town- 
site  and  sell  lots   162. 

Salvatierra,  Padre  Juan  Maria  de — v.  1,  with  Padre  Kino  57. 

San  Agustin  Del  Pueblito  De  Tucson — v.  1,  see  Tucson. 

San  Antonio  &  San  Diego  Stage  Line — v.  2,  1st  to  cross  Ariz.  1. 

San  Buenaventura,  Padre — v.  1,  with  Padre  Kino  48. 

San  Carlos  Apache — v,  7,  16. 

San  Carlos  Reservation — v.  8,  estab.  16. 

San  Caj^etano  De  Calabazas — v,  1,  see  Calabazas. 

Sanders — v.  2,  killed  by  Indians  281. 

Sanders,  Julius — v.  3,  1st  family  to  arrive  in  Prescott  211,  v.  4,  184. 

Sanderson — v.  6,  88. 

Sandford — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  311. 

Sandford,  S.  P. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey  184, 

San  Dionisio — v.  1,  name  given  Yuma  rancheria  by  Padre  Kino  60. 

Sandoval,  Antonio — v.  1,  Navajo  chief  with  Washington  against 
Navajo  307. 

Sanford — v.  6,  post  office  name  given  to  Adamsville  47. 

Sanford — v.  4,  65,  joins  1st  white  party  in  Verde  valley  230. 

Sanford,  Gen.  Geo.  B. — v.  4,  com.  to  investigate  Indian  affairs 
145,  V.  5,  commended  by  4th  Leg.  18,  report  of  exped.  against 
Apache  196,  in  McDowell's  2d  report  253,  v.  8,  expeds. 
against  Indians  112. 

San  Francisco  Mountains — v.  1,  mines  desc.  near  by  Espejo  29. 

San  Gabriel — v.  1,  estab.  by  Franciscans  with  Onate  41. 

San  Gabriel  de  Los  Espanoles  (N.  M.) — v.  1,  Onate  founds  31. 

San  Ignacio  Sonoita — See  Sonoita. 

San  Jose — v.  1,  where  Onate  crossed  the  Little  Colorado  48. 

San  Jose — See  also  Tumacacori. 

San  Miguel  de  Guevavi — See  Guevavi. 

San  Pedro — v.  8,  valley  1st  settled  by  Mark  i\ldrich  207. 

San   Pedro   Mine— v.  2,  71. 

San  Pedro  River — v.  1,  11,  reached  by  Padre  Kino  59,  by  Mor- 
mon  Battalion    139. 

San  Pedro  y  San  Pablo  de  Bicuner — v.  1,  mission  estab.  on  Colo- 
rado by  Garces  IZ. 

San  Rafael — See  Guevavi. 

Santa  Barbara  Mines — v.  1,  Onate's  exped.  Zl . 

Santa  Cruz  Valley — v.  4,  desc.  by  Bartlett  6. 

Santa  Fe — v.  1,  founded  by  Onate  31,  50,  desc.  by  Pike  81,  center 
of  trade  88,  arrival  Magoffin  and  Cooke  130. 

Santa  Fe  Trail  and  Trade — v.  1,  exploration  by  Pike  80,  desc.  81, 
exped.  by  others  87,  Becknell  and  Cooper  make  trip  to  Santa 
Fe  88,  trade  dates  from  1822,  trouble  with  Indians  89,  arrival 
of  caravan  90,  duties  91.  stage  route  estab.  93. 

50 


Santa  Maria  River — See  Bill  Williams'  fork. 

Santa  Rita  Copper  Mines — v.  1,  worked  by  Patties  94,  killing  of 
Indians  by  Johnson  116,  reprisals  by  Indians  117. 

Santa  Rita  del  Cobre  Mine — v.  2,  76. 

Santa  Rita  Mining  co.  and  Mines — v.  2,  71,  abandoned  35. 

Santiago — v.    1,    Yuma   chief  253. 

Santos  Angeles — See   Guevavi. 

San  Xavier  del  Bac — v.  1,  57,  founded  and  visited  by  Padre  Kino 
57-9,  in  charge  of  Padre  Segessor,  Padre  Steiger,  Padre  Paver 
61,  abandoned  and  re-occupied  62,  destroyed  by  Apaches  70, 
abandoned  71,  v.  3,  Poston's  speech  in  Congress  162,  return 
of  Jesuits  162,  v.  4,  6,  v.  6,  desc.  by  Rusling  15,  v.  7,  founding 
298. 

Saric — v.  1,  mission  visited  by  Padre  Kino  58. 

Sarrello,  A.  B.— v.  6,  90. 

Saunders — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  146,  164. 

Sawyer,  "Frenchy" — v.  6,  73,  97. 

Saxton,  W.  M. — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  296 

Sayers,  H. — v.  6,  246. 

Schofield,  Gen.— V.  8,  214,  284. 

Schneider,  Jacob — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 

Scol,  Wm.  F. — V.  3,  appointed  to  appraise  lots  in  Prescott  193. 

Schools — v.  3,  93,  Goodwin's  message  104,  approp.  made  by   1st 

Leg.   135-6,  v. '5,   JMcCormick   11,  act  passed  by  4th   Leg.  to 

estab.  dists.  29,  act  passed  by  5th  Leg.  estab.  64,  v.  6,  estab. 

.   in  Salt  River  valley  241,   1st  school  opened  in   Phoenix  242, 

Phoenix  and  Mesquite  dist.  243. 

Schools,   Indian — See   Indian  schools. 

Schools — See  also  Education. 

Scott,  Gen.— V.  1,  129. 

Scott — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Scott,  De  Morgan— V.  4,  in  Battle  Flat  fight  136. 

Scott,  Special  Agt. — v.  7,  sacred  tires  of  Hopi  163,  Snake  dance 
190. 

Scott,  W.  F.— V.  4,  256. 

Schultz,  J.  W. — V.  7,  Snake  dance  of  Hopi  170. 

Schuyler,  Walter  S. — v.  8,  in  charge  Indian  res.  at  Camp  Verde 
12,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  13. 

Seal  of  Territory — :v.  3,  created  by  1st  Leg.  137,  temporary  seal 
designed  by  McCormick  138. 

Seebright — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  134. 

Seeley,  Dr.  T.  P.— v.  3,  79. 

Settlements — v.  4,  Verde  valley,  personnel  of  party,  experiences 
215,  on  lower  San  Pedro,  personnel  247,  Fish's  desc.  early 
.  settlements  249-250,  in  Skull  valley  250,  Williamson  valley 
250-1,  271,  Walnut  Grove,  Kirkland  valley,  Peeples  valley. 
Skull  valley  271,  Woolsey's,  afterwards  Bower's,  ranch  272, 
by  Mormons  275,  at  Postle's  ranch  276. 

Seven  Cities  of  Cibola — v.  1,  5,  15-19. 

Sevier,  Ambrose  H. — v.  V,  comr.  to  Mex.,  treaty  Guadalupe 
Hidalgo    153. 

Sexton — V.  2,  connected  with  Vulture  mine  214,  v.  4.  281. 

Sexton,  Wm. — v.  8.  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Seymour,  Jas. — v.  2,  purchased  interest  in  Vulture  mine  214,  v.  4, 
owner  Vulture  mine  281. 

Shaffer,  Frank — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 

Shanks,  A.  L.— v.  4,  63. 

Sharo.  Nathaniel — v.  6,  97. 

Shaver,  Ellen — v.  6,  early  school  teacher  in  Phoenix  247,  mar- 
riage to  Jno.  Y.  T.  Smith  249. 

51 


Shaw,  Francis  A. — v.  6,  supervisor  Maricopa  co.  133. 

Shaw,  Capt.  Julius  C. — v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  283. 

Shelby,  Jim — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 

Sheldon,  Jas. — v.  4,  58. 

Sheldon,  Jas.  G.— v.  3,  80. 

Sheldon,  W.  J.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Shelton,  C.  Y.— v.  8,  148. 

Shelton,  Ralph— v.  4,  184. 

Sheppard,  Miss — v.  8,  survivor  Wickenburg  massacre  289. 

Sherbourne,  Jno.   P. — v.  1,  member  Whipple's  party  266. 

Sherman,  Lt. — v.  8,  in  exped.  against  Indians  112. 

Sherman,  Gen.  W.  T. — v.  3,  opinion  of  Ariz.  1,  v.  8,  peace  comr. 
to  Indians  5. 

Shibell,  Chas.  A. — v.  2,  sheriff  Pima  co.  permits  escape  of  Pion- 
cenay  239,  v.  4,  bio.  127,  address  to  Pioneer  Historical  Society 
129,  V.  5,  gives  list  of  murders  and  outrages  by  Indians 
318-19. 

Shinn,  Lt.  Jno.  B. — v.  2,  officer  in  California  column  91. 

Shipman — v.  2,  in  charge  of  Vulture  mine  214,  v.  4,  281. 

Shirland,  Capt. — v.  2,  detached  by  Carleton  to  capture  Mangas 
Coloradas   143. 

Shirley,  Jno.  Y.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  102-3,  132. 

Shoholm,  Fred  W. — v.  8,  victim  Wickenburg  massacre  290. 

Shorten,  Thomas — v.  6,  96. 

Shoup,  Solomon — v,  2,  member  Walker  party  243,  pres.  pioneer 
mining  dist.  304,  v.  6,  87. 

Show  Low — v.  6,  named  by  C.  E.  Cooley  279. 

Shultis,  David— V.  6,  96. 

Shupp,  Alford — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 

Siez — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  140, 

Silver  King  Mine — v.  6,  disc,  of  by  Sullivan  58,  redisc.  by  Isaac 
Copeland  and  associates  60. 

Silver  Mining  District — v.  4,  9. 

Simmons,  Benj. — v.  6,  97. 

Simmons,  Jno. — v.  3,  early  arrival  in  Prescott  211. 

Simmons,  Jno.  W. — v.  4,  165,  v.  5,  1. 

Simmons,  Molly — v.  3,  1st  child  born  in  Prescott  212. 

Simmons,  Thos.  W.— v.  4,  184. 

Simmons,  Wm. — v.  8,  149. 

Simms,  J.— v.  2,  killed  by  Apaches  281,  v.  3,  139,  164. 

Sims,  C.  Neville — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey 
184. 

Simpson,  W.  H. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  147. 

Sisters  of  St.  Joseph — v.  4,  school  house  at  Tucson  298,  299. 

Sitgreaves,  Capt.  L. — v.  1,  reconnaissance  down  Colorado  and 
Zuni  rivers  264,  v.  2,  from  Zuni  westward  17. 

Skivitkill — v.  5,  holds  conference  with  Gen.  Alexander  304. 

Skull  Valley — v.  4,  settlement  by  Joseph  Ehle  and  Jno.  H.  Dick- 
son 250,  271,  V.  5,  murders  by  Indians,  Hutton  in  command 
of  forces  300,  v.  6,  desc.  by  Rusling  27. 

Slack,  Jno.  B.— v.  4,  165. 

Slater — v.  1,  member  exped.  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  in  Mex. 
332. 

Slater,  Jno. — v.  5,  murdered  by  Indians  319. 

Slayden.  Capt. — v,  2,  aide-de-camp  to  Howard  when  treaty  with 
Cochise    made    230. 

Sloat,  Commodore  Jno.  Drake — v.  1,  commander  American 
squadron  in  Pacific,  takes  Cal.  for  U.  S.  123,  orders  Mont- 
gomery to  take  San   Francisco   126. 

Smiley.  Dave  and  Sam — v.  3,  34. 

52 


Smith — V.  1,  member  exped.  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  in  Mex. 

332,  V.  3,  early  resident  Prescott  192. 
Smith — V,  8,  killed  by  Indians  141. 
Smith,  Gen. — v.  2,  commanding  Pacific  division  17. 
Smith,    Lt. — V.   8,   in    exped.   against    Indians    112,   with    Gushing 

114,  115. 
Smith,  A.  B. — v.  2,  Pres.  Yavapai  mining  dist.  307,  v.  6,  87. 
Smith,  Lt.  A.  J. — v.  1,  in  command  Mormon  Battalion  from  Ft. 

Leavenworth  to  Santa  Fe  136. 
Smith,   Byron  W.— v.  6,  96. 

Smith,  Garlos — v.  3,  sergt.  at  arms  Gouncil  1st  Leg.  94. 
Smith,   Gassandra — v.  6,  226. 
Smith,  Ghas.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians-  128. 
Smith,  D.  H.— V.  8,  306. 
Smith,  E.  M. — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  320. 
Smith,  Elijah— V.  4,  59,  316,  324. 
Smith,  Jacob — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 

Smith,  Jas.  (Jim) — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  71,  72,  kills  Nel- 
son 81. 
Smith,  Jedediah — v.  1,  pioneer  94,  adventures  98. 
Smith,  Jno.   Y.   T. — v.  2,  purchases   Phoenix  business  287,   v.   5, 

member   5th   Leg.   34,   v.   6,   builds    1st   house   in   Salt   River 

valley  and  lays  out  road  to  Ft.  McDowell  70. 
Smith,  Maj.  Jos. — v.  3,  in  Woolsey's  report  270. 
Snxith,  Jos.  H.— V.  3,  80. 

Smith,  Rees — v.  1,  early  dist.  atty.  326,  v.  6,  124. 
Smith,  Robt.— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 
Smith,    Thos.    S. — v.    4,    supervisor    for    Pah-Ute    co.    157,    early 

Mormon  settler  275. 
Smith,  Van  G. — v.  2,  recorder  Walker  mining  dist.  310,  v.  3,  com. 

lay  out  lots  in  Prescott  192,  with   Groom  surveys   townsite 

2,  7,  1st  sheriff  Yavapai  co.  247. 
Smith,  W.  A. — v.  5,  known  as  "Shot  Gun  Smith,"  fight  against 

Indians  289,  290. 
Smith,  W.  H. — V.  8,  in  exped.  against  Indians  170. 
Smith,  Wm. — v.  2,  mill  near  Vulture  mine  214,  v.  4,  281. 
Smith,  Wm. — v.  6,  1st  merchant  in  Phoenix  174. 
Snively,  Jacob — v.  1,  disc,  gold  placers  in  Gila  valley  296. 
Snively,  Gol.— v.  2,  buried  at  Gillett  by  Swilling  254,  300,  v.  3,  80. 
Sobaipuri — v.  1,  57,  beg  for  padres  57-8,  join  Kino's  exped.  59, 

V.  7,  ask  for  priests  298,  hist.  306. 
Social  Life — v.  5,  McGormick  in  message  to  5th  Leg.  42. 
Socorro — v.  1,  visited  by  Onate  40. 
Somers — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  128. 
Sommerbee,  Lt. — v.  8,  Indian  scout  24. 

Sonoita — v.  1,  visited  by  Padre  Kino  60,  revolt  of  Pima  72,  76. 
Sonora  Exploring  and  Mining  co. — v.  1,  formation  279,  $100,000 

from  T.  &  P.  Ry.  280,  other  details  280,  287,  289,  v.  2,  desc.  72. 
Sorrells,  Alhira  B.— v.  6,  97. 
Soso,  Rita — V.  1,  resident  of  Tucson  349. 
Soto— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  136,  140. 
Soto,  Ganuto — v.  4,  308. 
Spanish  Missions  and  Settlements — v.  1,  extent  65,  prosperity  69, 

list  70,  decline  78. 
Spence — v.  2,  killed  by  Apaches  acct.  of  selling  them  liquor  237. 
Spencer,  Ghas. — v.  5,  mail  carrier  attacked  by  Walapai,  wounded, 

escort  killed  302,  v.  8,  130,  313. 
Spinas,  Joe — v.  6,  early  settler  at  Florence  52. 
Sprague,  Maj. — v.  2,  owner  Stevenson  mine  74. 
Springer,  Henry — v.  6,  pioneer  merchant  of  Round  valley  288,  296. 

53 


Springerville — v.  6,  growth  288. 

Stage  Line — v.  1,  between  Independence,  Mo.,  and  Santa  Fe  93, 
1st  across  Ariz,  1,  1st  mail,  opening  wagon  road  by  Leach 
and  Hutton  2,  commissary  dept.  assisted  by  military.  Butter- 
field  line  organized  4,  employees  attacked  by  Mex.  6,  discon- 
tinuance, route,  time,  etc.,  10,  change  of  route  14,  sale  of 
Butterfield  line  16. 

Stanford,  Fort — v.  2,  see  Fort  Breckenridge. 

Standifer,  Jeff. — v,  2,  encounter  with  Woolsey  223. 

Staples,  Maj.— V.  3,  38,  39. 

Starar  Brothers  (Andrew,  Jacob) — v.  6,  early  residents  Salt  River 
valley  and  Phoenix  97,  200. 

Stearns,  Chas.  W. — v.  2,  with  Smith  &  Woolsey  purchases  Phoe- 
nix business  287,  v.  6,  early  resident  Phoenix  185,  246,  247. 

Stebbins— v.  4,   129. 

Steck,  Dr.  Matthew — v.  2,  supt.  Indian  affairs  175,  178. 

Steele,  Col. — v.  2,  of  Confeds.,  captures  dispatch  bearer   120. 

Steele  and  McCarty — v.  6,  early  hotel  keepers  in  Phoenix  189. 

Stein,  Maj. — v.  1,  with  1st  Dragoons  in  Santa  Cruz  valley  288, 
commander  post  at  Calabazas  331. 

Steinbrook — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 

Stein's  Pass — v.  2,  fight  between  Free  Thompson  party,  Cochise 
and  Mangas  Coloradas  59. 

Stephens,  Lewis  A. — v.  5,  member  4th  Leg.  1,  Indians  attack 
home  during  absence,  brave  defense  Mrs.  Stephens  293,  294. 

Stevens,  A.  M.— v.  7,  religion  of  Hopi  158,  159. 

Stevens,  Daniel — v.  3,  early  arrival  in  Prescott  211. 

Stevens,  Edwd. — v.  4,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Stevens,  Geo.  H. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Stevens,  Lt.  Henry  H. — v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  282. 

Stevens,  Hiram  S. — v.  1,  resident  Tucson  345,  v.  2,  bio.  198,  assists 
participants  in  Camp  Grant  massacre  277,  v.  5,  member  5th 
Leg.  34,  V.  6,  124. 

Stevens,  Lewis  A. — v.  3,  early  arrival  Prescott  211,  v.  4,  165. 

Stevens,  Varney  A.— v.  3,  213,  v.  6,  88,  89,  96. 

Stevenson  Mining  Co. — v.  2,  74. 

Stewart,  Jno.  B. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey 
captures  teamster  who  killed  Apache  184,  220. 

Stewart,  T.  Scott— v.  3,  79. 

Stickney,  Daniel  H. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg.  90,  v.  4,  149,  v.  5, 
member  4th  Leg.  1,  5th  Leg.  33,  v.  6,  member  6th  Leg.  124, 
Pres.  of  Council  124-5. 

Stigers,  Dr. — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  143. 

Stiles,  Martin  A. — v.  6,  1st  receiver  of  land  office  at  Florence  57. 

Stimpson,  Jas.  H. — v,  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Stinson,  Jas. — v.  6,  280. 

Stinson,  Richard — v.  6,  dist.  atty.  Maricopa  co.  133. 

Stone,  Col. — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  near  Ft.  Bowie  286,  v.  8,  137. 

Stone,  Gen. — v.  1,  resident  Tucson  345. 

Stone,  Bannajah   H. — v.  6,  97. 

Stone,  Jno.  F. — v.  2,  bio.  74, 

Stoneman,  Gen.  Geo. — v.  1,  with  IMormon  Battalion  140,  com- 
mands escort  for  Parke  party  269,  v.  2,  visited  by  Oury, 
De  Long  and  Hopkins,  protesting  lack  of  military  protection. 
Camp  Grant  massacre  follows  272,  v.  8,  assigned  to  command 
of  Ariz.  96,  policy  97,  succeeded  by  Crook  104,  trip  through 
Indian  country  117,  interviews  chiefs  121-158,  criticism  199, 
builds  roads  207-8. 

Stoneman,  Geo.  J. — v.  1,  son  of  Gen.  Stoneman  140. 

Store — V.  1,  1st  in  Tucson  346. 

54 


Storey,  Jas.  F. — v.  6,  96. 

Stout,  J.  H. — V.  8,  agt.  for  Pima  4,  reports  to  Colyer  353. 

Stowe — V.  4,  early  prospector  279. 

Strode,  Stephen  S. — v.  6,  96. 

Strobell,   Max.— v.  5,  196. 

Strole,  Henry — v.  5,  drowned  in  Grand  Canyon  133. 

Stuart,  Geo.  H.— v.  8,  217. 

Sturgeon,  Dr. — v.  2,  army  surgeon,  sent  skull  of  Alangas  Colo- 
radas  east  148. 

Suamca,  Santa  Alaria  de — v.  1,  visited  by  Padre  Kino  58. 

Subiate,  Manuel — v.  8,  Mex.  kills  Lumelly  204. 

Sugar  Foot  Jack — v.  3,  record  and  light  with  Indians  32. 

Sullivan — v.  6,  disc,  of  Silver  King  mine  58-9,  hist.  59. 

Sullivan,  J.  W.— v.  5,  bio.  331. 

Summerhayes,  Mrs. — v.  8,  descr.  C.  E.  Cooley's  house  75. 

Summers,  Jno.  B. — v.  6,  96. 

Sumner,  Gen.  Edwin  V. — v.  1,  commands  dragoons  invading  Cal. 
129,  treaty  with  Navajos  308,  builds  Ft.  Deliance  309,  v.  3, 
advises  govt,  to  turn  Ariz,  over  to  Indians  1. 

Sumner,  Jno.  C. — v.  5,  member  Powell's  1st  exped.  180. 

Supervisors — v.  4,  boards  created  by  2d  Leg.  156,  powers  given 
by  3d  Leg.  l'88-9. 

Surveyor  General — v.  4,  2d  Leg.  asks  Congress  to  appoint  162, 
•     V.  5,  5th  Leg.  asks  Congress  to  appoint  43. 

Surveyors  of  Land — v.  6,  report  of  Jno.  Wasson,  Surv.  Gen,  309. 

Surveys — v.  3,  early  203,  contract  with  deputy  surv.  Pierce  303, 
"initial  point"  selected  304,  work  abandoned  because  military 
protection  withdrawn  304,  contracts  and  surveys  by  Ingalls 
306. 

Sutorius,  Capt. — v.  5,  in  exped.  against  Indians  113. 

Swain,  Gus. — v.  2,  pioneer  249. 

Sweetner,   Clark — v.  3,  79. 

Swetnam,  Jas.  M. — v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  215,  member  Wells 
and  Osborn  party  268. 

Swilling,  J.  W.  (Jack) — v.  1,  disc,  of  Weaver  diggings  297,  v.  2. 
It.  of  Confeds.,  skirmish  with  federals  under  Barrett,  latter 
killed  88,  commands  detachment  which  captured  Mangas 
Coloradas  146,  operates  mill  at  Vulture  mine  213,  member 
Walker  party  243,  bio.  251,  builds  town  ditch  at  Phoenix, 
builds  Tempe  canal,  arrested  on  suspicion  holding  up  Wick- 
enburg  stage,  dies  in  Yuma  prison,  his  statement  252-289, 
V.  3,  12,  V.  4,  organizes  to  go  after  Apaches  with  Woolsey's 
party  55,  builds  mill  at  Vulture  mine  281,  v.  6,  organizes  party 
for  settlement  in  Salt  River  valley,  organizes  Swilling  Irriga- 
tion Canal  co.  71,  organizer  in  Phoenix  Ditch  co.  86,  attempts 
to  have  Phoenix  located  at  Mill  City  101,  Irvine  desc.  ranch 
and  home  120,  v.  8.  74. 

Swilling  Irrigation  and  Canal  co. — v.  6,  takes  out  Swilling  ditch  72. 

Swilling  Mine — v.  2,  253. 

Swilling  Party — v.  6,  personnel  71.  desc.  and  anecdotes  73. 

Sypert,  Hannibal — v.  4.  165. 

T 

Tabora,  Capt. — v.  1,  member  Onate's  exped.  45. 

Tafoya — v.  1,  one  leader  insurrection  in  N.  M.  148. 

Taggart,  J.— v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 

Taggart,  Wm. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Tanner.  J.  A. — v.  8,  agt.  on  Colorado  res.  5. 

Tappan,  Col. — v.  2,  agrees  to  return  Navajo  to  own  country  179. 

Tappan,  Dr. — v.  4,  killed  by  Indians  138. 

55 


Tarbox — v.  2,  leader  lumbermen  at  Canoa  54,  assists  Mex.  against 

Apache,  self  and  men  killed  55,  56. 
Tarjay---v.  2,  son  of  Cochise  and  war  chief  of  Chiricahua  238. 
Tarsith — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 
Taxation — v.  4,  fixed  by  2d  Leg.  157,  residents  of  Prescott  assess 

own  property   162. 
Taylor,  Chas. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 
Taylor,  Chris.— v.  6,  208. 

Taylor,  Jas.  W. — v.  3,  reports  on  mineral  resources  2. 
Taylor,  Jno.  L. — v.  6,   124. 
Taylor,  Lt.  Griff — v.  3,  relieves  exped.  sent  to  estab.  Ft.  Whipple 

44. 
Taylor,   L.   G. — v.  2,  supposed  by  Jack   Swilling   to  be   cause   of 

latter's  arrest  257. 
Taylor,  P.  H. — v.  2,  member  Lt.  Ives'  exploring  party  19. 
Taylor,  Thos.   L.— v.  4,  308. 
Taylor,  Wm. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  132. 
Taylor,  Gen.  Zachary — v.  1,  127-8. 
Teal,  Jno. — v.  2,  in  tight  at  Apache  pass,  shoots   Mangas   Colo- 

radas   132. 
Telegraphs — See  Railroads. 
Tempe — v.   2,    1st    named    Hayden's    Ferry,    1st    store    estab.   by 

Hayden  289,  v.  6,  location  103,  hist.  108. 
Tempe  Canal — v,  2,  dug  by  Jack  Swilling  253. 
Tenaja,    El   Arroyo   de   la — v.   2,   placer   mines   disc,    by    Pauline 

Weaver  293. 
Taps,  Juan — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  131. 
Territorial  Organization — v.  1,  names  suggested  at  Tucson  322, 

petitions  for  govt.  324,  Mowry  informal  delegate  to  Congress 

324,  325,  other  particulars  of  govt,  formation  325-6. 
Territorial  Prison — v.  5,  McCormick  mentions  need  13. 
Territory  of  Arizona — v.  2,  Carleton  issues  proclamation  110,  or- 
ganization 321,  v.  4,  boundaries  2. 
Texas — v.  1,  annexation  of  119,  area  claimed  127. 
Thanksgiving  Day — v.  6,  celebration  in  Phoenix  in  1875  189. 
Thayer,  Capt.  Jno.  S. — v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  284-5,  v.  5,  58. 
Thibodo,  Dr.  O.  J.^ — Agt.  for  Darrell  Duppa  75,  early  physician 

in  Phoenix  195-6. 
Thom,  Capt.  G. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey  188. 
Thomas — v.  1,  with  exped.  to  join  Crabb  in  Mex.  331. 
Thomas,  Gen.   E.  D. — v.  3,  289,  v.  6,  reminiscences   of  Phoenix 

223-4. 
Thomas,  Gen.  Geo.  H. — v.  8,  commands  division  Pacific  21,  re- 
ports on  conditions  in  Ariz.  78. 
Thomas,   Gen.   Lorenzo — v.   3,    letter   from   Carleton   relating   to 

gold  disc.  11. 
Thomas,  Wm.  H.— v.  4,  165. 

Thompson,  Lt. — v.  2,  under  Roberts  in  fight  at  Apache  Pass  138. 
Thompson,  B.  F. — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  311,  v.  8,  131. 
Thompson,  Clint — v.  8,  139. 
Thompson,  D.  C— v.  8,  144. 

Thompson,  Capt.  Jno. — v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  285. 
Thompson,   Free — v.   2,   fight  at  Stein's   Pass  with   Cochise   and 

Mangas  Coloradas  59. 
Thompson,  Thomas — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey 

184. 
Thompson,  Wm. — v.  3,  deputy  postmaster  218. 
Thrift,  Lon — v.  2,  pioneer  miner  249. 

Thurber,  Geo. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey  184. 
Tidball.  J.  C. — v.  1,  commands  escort  for  Whipple's  party  267. 

56 


Tidball,  Capt.  T.  T. — v.  2,  marches  against  Apaches  154,  v.  3, 
tight  with  Indians  283. 

Tilden,  Ridgely— v.  4,  308. 

Timber— V.  6,  117,  313. 

Tippet,  Henry — v.  6,  97. 

Tipton,  Lt. — V,  2,  member  Ives'  party  23. 

Tip-Top  Mine — v,  2,  disc.  253. 

Tisnado,  ^Mariano — v.  8,  Mex.  lynched  for  cattle  stealing  204-5. 

Tison,  Rio  del  (Colorado  River) — v.  1,  firebrand  river  20. 

Titus,  H.  T. — v.  2,  early  owner  Mowry  mine  69. 

Titus,  Col. — V.  1,  owner  in  Patagonia  mine  292. 

Titus,  Elliott — V.  2,  killed  by  Indians  44. 

Titus,  Jno. — V.  2,  1st  dist.  atty.  325,  v.  3,  succeeds  Chief  Justice 
Turner  246,  v,  4,  tried  Duffield  for  carrying  concealed 
weapons  172-3,  v.  6,  136,  v.  8,  charges  jury  on  trial  Camp 
Grant  massacre   161. 

Toll  Roads — v.  3,  incorporated  by  1st  Leg.  132,  charges  133-4. 

Tomlinson — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  319. 

Tomlinson,  Jas.  A. — v.  6,  trader  at  Camp  McDowell  and  corre- 
spondent for  Arizona  Miner  215-16. 

Tonto  Apaches — v.  2,  on  war-path  30,  v.  2,  fight  with  guberna- 
torial party  67,  v.  7,  wars  with  whites  2,  15-16. 

Tontonteiac — v.    1-,  kingdom   13. 

Toppan,  Col. — See  Tappan,  Col.  ^BssffSl  .•^S*f.?^^nd 

Tovar,  Pedro  de — v.  1,  sent  by  Coronado  on  exploring  exped.  21, 
returns  22. 

Townsend,  Jno. — v.  2,  early  settler  249,  v.  8,  150,  exped.  against 
Indians  170. 

Tozer,  Chas. — v.  1,  with  Oury  exped.  to  join  Crabb  in  Mex.  329. 

Trade  Rats— v.  5,  241. 

Trahern,  Wm. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  129. 

Transportation — v.  4,  cost  14,  289. 

Treasurer — v.  4,  1st  report  163,  v.  5,  expense  of  Ter.  for  1869 
49-50,  report  59. 

Trehan,  Wm. — v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  280. 

Trist,  Nicholas — v.  1,  com.  to  Mex.,  fails  to  make  treaty  152, 
succeeds  153. 

Trout,  Lt.— V.  8,  315. 

Troy,  Corporal — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Trueworthy,  Capt.  Thos. — v.  4,  thanked  by  2d  Leg.  161. 

Trujillo,  Jose — v.  1,  Franciscan  55. 

Truman,  Ben  C. — v.  4,  special  agt.  post  office  dept.,  writes  desc. 
Prescott  256,  v.  6,  reminiscences,  officially  names  Phoenix 
and  Florence  112. 

Tisaltaden — v.  7,  Apache  desc.  18. 

Tubac — V.  1,  58,  65,  presidio  transferred  to  Tucson  68,  74,  Anza 
commands  74,  desc,  settlers  petition  for  restoration  75,  silver 
mine,  friendly  Apaches  76,  pop.  in  1848  233.  Sonora  Exploring 
&  Mining  co.  in  vicinity  280,  1st  newspaper  352,  v.  4,  7,  v.  5, 
in  Mason's  report  184,  deserted  because  of  Indians  187,  v.  7, 
founding  of  mission  298. 

Tubutama,  San  Pedro  y  San  Pablo  de — v.  1,  mission  58. 

Tucson — V.  1,  11,  rancheria  62,  founding  63-66,  presidio  of  Tubac 
transferred  68,  Indians,  church  of  brick  70,  in  1772  made  a 
walled  town,  date  of  founding  71-74,  Indians  quartered  in 
pueblo  74,  pop.  75,  reached  by  Mormon  Battalion  140,  only 
permanent  town  in  northern  Sonora  at  time  Boundary  Com- 
mission Survey,  pop.  and  condition  in  1848  233,  meeting  for 
organization  of  Ter.  322,  323,  constitutional  convention  325, 

57 


exped.  organized  to  join  Crabb  in  Mex.  329,  leading  town  of 
Ariz.,  American  flag  raised  by  dragoons,  early  days  and 
early  residents  344,  a  walled  town,  date  of  founding  346, 
ancient  hist.  348,  v.  2,  convention  declares  Ariz,  part  of 
Confederacy,  Oury  delegate  to  southern  Congress  86,  taken 
by  Hunter  for  Confederacy  87,  Hunter  retreats.  West  re- 
takes for  Union  88,  Carleton  declares  Ter.  under  martial  law 
88,  102,  license  taxed  on  merchants  115,  booming  time  116, 
celebrities  117,  Brown  given  monopoly  of  gambling  and  sell- 
ing liquor  118,  v.  3,  organized  by  Goodwin's  proclamation  71, 
188,  v.  4,  7,  military  hq.  252,  law  and  order  com.  254,  reformed 
by  Judge  Chas.  Meyer  254-5,  flour  mill  built  by  Jackson  255, 
256,  Catholics  returned,  build  church  293,  v.  5,  capital  by  4th 
Leg.  28,  called  village  by  Mason,  building  boom,  1st  survey, 
goods  brought  into  327,  v.  6,  desc.  by  Rusling  11,  v.  7,  found- 
ing of  mission  298. 

Tully,  Ochoa  &  Co. — v.  5,  327. 

Tully,  P.  R.— V.  5,  death  327. 

Tumacacori — v.  1,  mission  S7,  visited  by  Padre  Kino  58,  hist.  76, 
Apaches  attack  76,  those  in  charge  77,  v.  4,  6,  v.  7,  founding 
of  mission  298. 

Turk,  The — v.  1,  tells  fabulous  stories  of  Quivira  to  Spaniards  24, 
killed  25. 

Turkey  Creek — v.  1,  mining  dist.  worked  by  Walker  party  298, 
v.  2,  early  mining  298. 

Turnbull,  Capt. — v.  1,  brings  1st  steamer  to  Colorado  river  252. 

Turner,  Wm.  F. — v.  2,  1st  chief  justice  Ter.  Ariz.  325,  v.  3,  as- 
signed to  3d  judicial  dist.  74,  resigns  246,  v.  4,  charge  to 
grand  jury  204,  v.  6,  136. 

Tusayan — v.  1,  province  of  seven  villages  21. 

Tuttle,  Ed.  D.— v.  3,  80,  member  1st  Leg.  90. 

Twaddle,  Harvey— v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  280,  v.  8,  130. 

Tweed,  Judge  Chas.  A. — v.  6,  presides  over  1st  dist.  court  in 
Maricopa  co.  136,  bio.  136. 

Twomey,  David — v.  6,  82,  97. 

Tyson,  Chas.— v.  2,  builds  mill  at  Vulture  mine  213,  v.  4,  281. 

U 

Uncle  Sam — v.  1,  1st  steamer  on  Colorado  river  252. 

Underwood — v.  6,  97. 

Upton,  Gen.  L. — v.  4,  Surv.  Gen.  dist.  Cal.  306,  makes  contract 
with  Wilfred  &  Ingalls  306. 

Upton — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  127. 

Upton,  Lt.   Frank— V.  8,  50. 

Utes— V.  1,  kill  Bill  Williams  and  Dr.  Kent  105. 

Usen — V.  7,  Apache  name  for  God  24. 

Usher,  Jno.  T. — v.  2,  Indian  comr.  makes  treaty  with  Apache  154. 

Utah — V.  4,  attempts  to  annex  pari  of  northern  Ariz.  202. 

V 

Vaca,  Alvar  Nunez  Cabeza  de — See  Cabeza  de  Vaca. 

Vader,  Jas. — v.  6,  97. 

Valde,  Jose  Faustin— v.  1,  203. 

Valentine — v.  4,  43. 

Vallejo,  Maj.  Salvador — v.  4.  commands  California  cavalry  123. 

Van  Bibber — v.  2,  partner  Henry  Wickenburg  212. 

Vandermark,  Lodovic — v.  6,  member  Swilling  party  72. 

Van  Der  Mehn,  Jno. — v.  4,  Lt.  in  Arizona  Vols.  99,  100. 

Van  Duzen — v.  4,  38. 

Van  Tramp — v.  2,  conditions  in  Ariz,  after  withdrawal  of  troops 
56. 

Van  Warren  &  McCarty — v.  6,  early  hotel  keepers  in  Phoenix  189. 

58 


Van  VHet,  Capt.  Frederick— v.  8,  279. 

Vekol   Aline— V.  4,   118,    119. 

Velasco — v.  1,  viceroy,  treats  with  Onate  33. 

Venable,  Thos. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  141. 

Verde  River — v.  1,  desc.  by  Espejo  29,  crossed  by  Onate  48. 

Verde  Valley — v.  4,  1st  white  settlement  215,  dissensions  218, 
219,  irrigation  222,  Indian  raids  225,  portion  of  party  leaves 
229,  new  arrivals  230,  Indian  troubles  231,  U.  S.  quartermaster 
and  crop  purchases  239,  240,  more  Indian  troubles  241,  mili- 
lary  sent  for  protection  prove  useless  243, 

Vickrey— G.  H.— v.  4,  49. 

Vigil,  Donaciano — v.  1,  1st  American  Sec.  of  N.  M.  133,  murdered 
in  revolt  147. 

Vigilance  Committees — v.  4,  in  Yuma  and  Tucson  254. 

Villagra — v.  1,  of  Onate's  exped.  33. 

Vincent — v.  4,  teacher  sent  by  Catholic  church  to  Ter.  293. 

Virginia  Ditch  co. — v.  6,  notice  of  approp.  water  Salt  river  89. 

"Virgin  Mary" — v.  3,  owner  restaurant  at  Gimletville  35,  runs  1st 
boarding  house  for  miners  in  Prescott  212. 

Volunteers,  Arizona — See  Arizona  Volunteers. 

Vulture  Mine — v.  1,  disc,  by  Henry  Wickenburg  298,  v.  2,  212, 
hist.  213,  298,  v.  4,  280,  v.  5,  mentioned  by  McCormick  37,  v.  6, 
desc.  by  Rusling  24. 

W 

"Waco  Bill" — V.  4,  encounter  with  Duffield  169,  170. 

Wade,  Sen.  Ben. — v.  2,  supports,  measure  for  organization  of 
Ter.  321. 

Wadsworth,  Gen. — v.  1,  resident  of  Tucson  345. 

Wakefield,   Dr.— v.  8,   killed  by   Indians   139. 

Walapai — v.  2,  kill  Ed.  Clower  and  burn  cabin  259,  on  war-path 
261,  V.  3,  treaty  with  45,  escort  of  gubernatorial  party  attack 
Walapai  46,  v.  4,  friendly  to  whites  21,  v.  5,  McCormick  says 
hostile  2,  Price  says  most  dangerous  222,  Price  exped.  against 
294,  wound  mail  rider  302,  v.  7,  wars  with  whites  2,  hist., 
legends,  etc.,  125,  v.  8,  res.  8,  outbreak  9. 

Waldemar,  A.  F. — v.  3,  report  on  Colorado  river  Indian  res.  168. 

Waldemar,  P.— v.  4,  318. 

Walker,  Capt.  J.  D. — v.  3,  80,  v.  4.  commands  Pima  Indians  in 
Arizona  Vols.  96,  fights  Apaches  97,  bio.  ^2,  117,  v.  6,  54, 
V.  7,  243. 

Walker,  Jno. — v.  2,   Indian  agt.  29. 

Walker,  Jno. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242. 

Walker,  Jno.— v.  6,  275,  276. 

Walker,  Capt.  Jos.  R. — v.  2,  commands  Walker  party  241,  disc, 
gold  in  Ariz.  241,  v.  3,  letter  from  Carleton  on  gold  disc.  4, 
story  by  Banta  26,  40,  206,  v.  4,  315. 

Walker,  Jos.  R.,  Jr. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  242, 

Walker,  Juana — v.  4,  Pima  Indian  girl  claims  estate  of  J.  D. 
Walker  119,  120. 

Walker,  Lucien— v.  4,  brother  of  J.  D.  Walker  119. 

Walker  Mining  District — v.  2,  meeting  of  310. 

Walker  Party — v.  1,  arrives  in  Ariz.,  works  placers  on  Granite 
creek  298,  v.  2,  capture  of  Mangas  Coloradas  145,  organiza- 
tion and  personnel  241,  with  Kit  Carson  fights  Indians  242, 
under  McCleave  at  Ft.  West  243,  244,  base  near  Prescott  244, 
trip  to  Pima  villages,  disc,  gold  on  Lynx  creek,  mining  dist. 
estab.  245,  visited  by  soldiers  under  Clarke  of  N.  M.  46.  dis- 
solution 248,  V.  3,  3,  26,  29,  30,  39,  40. 

Wall,  Stewart— V.  4,  in  Battle  Flat  fight  136. 

Wallace — v.  2.  captured  by  Cochise  and  tortured  to  death  32. 

59 


Wallace,  Capt.  (Big  Foot) — v,  2,  pony  rider  and  mail  carrier  3, 

Wallen,  Col.  H.  D. — v.  4,  ill,  v.  5,  succeeds  Mason  in  N.  Ariz,  298. 

Walnut  Grove — v,  4,  settlement  271. 

Walter,  Wm. — v.  3,  member  1st  Leg,  90. 

Walters,  Jas.— v.  4,  129, 

Walters,  P.  L,  (Jack) — v,  6,  member  Swilling  party  72,  death  84, 
197,   198. 

Wamsley,  I.  A. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  130. 

Wander,  Ferdinand — v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians,  kills  self  to  end 
suffering  133. 

War  Dept. — v,  3,  opposes  Poston's  efforts  to  secure  posts  and 
res.  184,  185. 

Ward — V.  2,  foster  father  Mickey  Free  30. 

Ward,  Henry  McC— v.  4,  165. 

Ward,  Jno. — v.  8,  interpreter  for  Colyer  218. 

Ward,  Robt— V,  2,  148. 

Warden,  Milt. — v,  4,  70,  71,  v.  8,  kills  suspected  participants  in 
Wickenburg   massacre   301. 

Ware  &  Ford— v.  6,  179,  215. 

Warfield,  Sergt.  v.  8,  115. 

W^arner,  Solomon — v.  1,  resident  Tucson  345,  1st  American  store 
in  Tucson  346,  1st  flouring  mill  in  Ter.  346,  v.  3,  wagon  train 
attacked  237,  v.  8,  wounded  by  Indians  139. 

Warren,  Capt.  Henry — v.  2,  member  California  column,  desc. 
capture  and  killing  of  Mangas  Coloradas  144. 

Washburn,   Charley — v,  3,  34. 

Washburn,  H.  S. — v.  4,  Capt.  1st  company  Arizona  Vols.  96,  ac- 
tivities against  Indians  98,  commended  by  Wallen  111,  rec- 
ord 120. 

Washington,  Col.  J,  M. — v,  1,  exped.  against  Navajos  307,  v.  7,  38. 

Wasson,  Jno.  v.  6,  87,  Surv.  Gen.  of  Ter.  308,  bio.  308,  report  309. 

Wasson,   Jos. — v.  6,   175. 

Watson — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  134, 

Watson,  Kinsey — v,  6,  97. 

Wattron,  F.  J. — v.  4,  sheriff  of  Navajo  co.,  desc.  W.  H.  Hardy 
73,  74. 

Watts,  Delegate — v.  2,  supports  measure  for  organization  of  Ter. 
322. 

Wauba  Yuma— v,  2,  chief  killed  by  Sam  Miller  258, 

Wayne,  Maj.  I^enry  C. — v.  1,  commissioned  to  bring  camels  to 
U.  S.  354. 

Weapons — v.  5,  deadly  weapons  forbidden  by  4th  Leg.  26. 

Weatherbee,   A.— v.  3,  80, 

Weaver — v.  2,  town  estab,  297,  v,  4,  19. 

Weaver,  Ben.— v,  4,  28,  261. 

Weaver,  Pauline — v.  1,  94,  guide  for  Mormon  Battalion  138,  disc, 
gold  placers  at  La  Paz,  Weaver  Creek  and  diggings  297, 
V.  2,  name  inscribed  on  Casa  Grande  184,  guides  Peeples 
party  in  Ariz.  247,  bio.  184,  disc,  gold  placers  at  Weaver  dig- 
gings 184,  disc,  gold  in  Arroyo  de  la  Tenaja  293,  v.  3,  29, 
death  30,  mentioned  by  Poston  in  Congress  179,  by  Mike 
Burns  298.  v.  4,  65.  v.  8,  son  killed  by  Indians  128. 

Weaver  Creek — v.  2,  disc,  of  gold  and  naming  by  Peeples  party 
247.  248. 

Weaver  Diggings — v.  1,  disc.  297,  v.  2,  184. 

Weaver  Mining  District — v.  2,  formation  of  302.  v.  4,  9. 

Webb.  Dr.  Thomas  H. — v.  1,  Sec.  Boundary  Commission  Survey 
184,  experience  with  Indians  237. 

Webber.  Dr. — v.  4,  one  of  original  locators  of  Rich  Hill,  men- 
tioned by  Genung  29. 

60 


Weber,  W.  VV.— v.  8,  294. 

Webster,  Dr. — v.  1,  member  Arizona  Mining  &  Trading  co.'s  ex- 
plormg  party  278. 

Weems,  J.  E. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey  184. 

Welch,  G.  C. — V.  2,  pioneer  miner  307. 

Weller,  Jno.  B. — v.  1,  appointed  by  Pres,  Polk,  U.  S.  Com.  on 
Boundary  Commission  Survey  183,  superseded  by  Fremont 
183. 

Wells — V.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey  229. 

Wells,  Lt. — V.  8,  scout  of  against  Indians  24. 

Wells,  Judge  E.  W. — v.  3,  Assist.  Sec.  Council  1st  Leg.  94,  ad- 
dress on  early  days  in  Prescott  191,  v.  4,  Capt.  of  Wells  and 
Osborn  party,  early  arrival  Prescott  268,  desc.  of  Indian 
cunning  88,  bio.  269,  v.  5,  Indian  attack  on  Burnt  Ranch  311. 

Wells,  Mrs.  E,  W. — v.  2,  passenger  when  Miller  killed  Wauba 
Yuba  259. 

Wells,  J.  H. — V.  1,  1st  controller  of  provisional  Ter.  325. 

Wells  and  Osborn  Party — v.  4,  personnel  268. 

Wells-Fargo  Express  co. — v.  2,  purchases  Butterfield  stage  line  16. 

Welsh,  Matt. — v.  8,  attacked  by  Indians  131. 

Werringer,  W.  A. — v.  3,  80. 

Wertheimer.  Aaron — v.  6,  partner  Michael  Wormser  198,  death 
199. 

West,  Gen. — v.  2,  reports  to  War  Dept.  capture  and  killing  of 
Mangas  Coloradas  148. 

West,  Lt.  Col. — V.  2,  of  California  Column,  takes  Tucson  for 
Union  88,   102,   118. 

West,  Jno. — V.  2,  pioneer  miner  316. 

Wheat  Fields — v.  2,  Woolsey  destroys  crops  222. 

Wheat,   Granville — v.  6,  pioneer   of   Florence  55. 

Wheaton,  Gen.  Frank — v.  2,  263,  v.  8.  in  command  of  N.  military 
dist.  of  Ariz.  93. 

Wheeler,  Lt. — v.  8,  names  meteoric  crater  "Franklin's  Hole"  31. 

Wheeler,  Representative — v.  2,  opposes  organization  of  Ter.  322. 

Wheelhouse,  J.  V. — v.  2,  Sec.  Pioneer  mining  dist.  304,  resigns 
as  recorder  Walker  mining  dist.  310. 

Wheelhouse,  W^m. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243,  recorder  1st 
mining  dist.  of  Ariz.  245. 

Wheeling,  Sergt.^ — v.  2,  bearer  dispatches  from  Carleton  to 
Canby,  killed  by  Apaches  120. 

Whipple,  Lt.  A.  W. — v.  1,  in  charge  engineers  of  Boundary  Com- 
mission Survey  183,  desc.  Yumas  253,  exploration  and  sur- 
vey 265,  V.  2,  exploration  and  survey  for  R.  R.  route  along 
35th  parallel  18. 

Whipple,  Fort — See  Fort  Whipple. 

Whisler— V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  149. 

Whisler,  G.  R.— v.  8,  killed  by  Mex.  206,  207. 

W^hitcomb — v.  4,  settler  in  Verde  valley  223. 

Whitcomb,  Josiah— v.  5,  killed  by  Indians  209,  210,  v.  8,  131. 

White— V.  4,  51. 

White,  A.  M. — v.  2,  arrested  for  purchasing  supplies  for  L^nion 
93,  94,  V.  3,  78,  v.  8,  agt.  for  Pima  4. 

White,  Andrew — v.  6,  97. 

White,  Chaplain— V.  6,  236,  237. 

White,  Dan— V.  3,  34. 

White,  Rev.  David— v.  8,  reports  to  Peace  Comr.  Colyer  278.  279. 

White,  Jas. — v.  5,  alleged  1st  to  make  passage  of  Grand  Canyon 
122,  leaves  Ft.  Dodge  12.4,  attacked  by  Indians  and  Baker 
killed  128.  White  and  Strole  build  raft  and  begin  journey  129, 
Strole   drowned   133,   W'^hite's  experience   with   Walapai   139, 

61 


arrives  at  Callville,  rescued  by  Mormons  140,  story  of  trip  in 
U.  S.  Senate  doc,  story  written  by  Calhoun,  member  Kansas 
&  Pacific  Ry.  co.'s  surv.  exped.  144,  acct.  trip  published  in 
"Rocky  Mountain  Herald"  145,  said  to  have  been  rescued  by 
Wilburn  of  barge  Colorado  152,  still  living  at  Trinidad,  Colo., 
his  own  story  153,  166. 

White,  Mrs. — v.  2,  capture  of  by  Jicarilla  Apaches  151. 

White,  Wm.,  Jr. — v.  1,  member  Whipple's  party  266. 

White  Mountain  Apache — See  Coyotero  Apache. 

White  Mountain  Reservation — v.  8,  estab.  in  1871   16. 

Whiting,  Wm.  H.— v.  4,  264. 

Whitlock,  Capt.  Jas.  H.— v.  3,  fight  with  Indians  281. 

Whitlow,  Chas. — v.  6,  1st  postmaster  at  Maryville  234. 

Whitlow,  Molly— V.  6,  234. 

Whitlow,  Sierra  Nevada — v.  6,  234. 

Whitman,  Lt.  Royal  E. — v.  2,  Indian  agt.  at  Old  Camp  Grant, 
evil  results  270,  v.  8,  in  command  at  Grant  156,  agt.  for  Apache 
157,  influence  with  Indians  163,  receives  Comr,  Colyer  230, 
data  on  Camp  Grant  massacre  242. 

Whitting,  Jno. — v.  8,  killed  by   Indians   128. 

Whooten,    Sergt.— v.    8,    115. 

Wickenburg — v.  4,  19,  v,  5,  Indian  raids  281,  282,  v.  6,  desc.  by 
Rusling   24. 

Wickenburg,  Henry — v.  1,  disc.  Vulture  mine  298,  v.  2,  bio,  211, 
disc.  Vulture  mine  212,  v.  4,  60,  61,  v.  6,  71. 

Wickenburg  Massacre— v.  8,  21Z,  289. 

Wilbur,  A.  P. — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey  184. 

Wilbur,  H.  R.— v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Wilbur,  Dr.  R.  A.— v.  8,  230. 

Wilburn,  Capt. — v.  5,  master  barge  Colorado,  said  to  have  rescued 
Jas.  White  152. 

Wilcox — v.  2,  owner  in  Colorado  River  copper  mine  74. 

Wilcox,  Capt. — v.  1,  reached  mouth  of  Colorado  251. 

Wilcox,  Phil.  P. — v.  8,  agt.  at  San  Carlos  17. 

Wilkins — V.  1,  member  exped.  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  in  Mex. 
ZZ2. 

Williams,  Dr. — v.  8,  agt.  at  Camp  Verde  res.  10,  11. 

Williams,  Bill— v.  1,  94,  hist,  and  death  102,  v.  2,  member  Walker 
party  243. 

Williams,  Fred  T.— v.  4,  322. 

Williams,  Geo. — v.  1,  member  Arizona  Mining  &  Trading  co.'s 
exploring  party  278. 

Williams,  Geo. — v.  6,  97. 

Williams,  Capt.  J.  W. — v.  5,  wounded  in  Indian  fight  255. 

Williams,  "Parson" — v.  3,  1st  postmaster  at  Prescott  36. 

Williams,  Thos. — v,  6,  246. 

Williams,  W.  W. — v.  1,  early  resident  Tucson  345,  v.  4,  129,  v.  5, 
bio.  327,  328. 

Williamson,  Lt. — y,  2,  member  Ives'  party  17. 

Williamson,  A.  C. — v.  8,  Indians  attack  ranch  144. 

Williamson  Valley— v.  4,  250,  251,  271,  v.  6,  desc.  by  Rusling  41. 

Willing,  Dr.— v.  4,  63. 

Willis,  Maj.  E.  B. — v.  2,  comniands  exped.  to  estab.  post  in  Chino 
valley  250,  v.  3,  commands  exped.  to  estab.  post  at  gold  dig- 
gings 31,  fight  with  Indians  281. 

Willis,  Jno. — V.  8,  murderer,  lynched  205. 

Wilsey,  Jesse — v.  4,  305. 

Wilson,  Benj.  D. — v.  1,  survivor  of  Apache  massacre  118. 

Wilson,  Geo.  H.  (Yackey)— v.  8,  310,  311. 

Wilson,  Gordon  A.— v.  6,  97.  124. 

62 


Wilson,  J.  D. — V.  1,  member  exped.  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb 
in  Alex.  331. 

V\^ilson,  J.  M.— V.  6,  88. 

Wilson,  T.  J.— V.  6,  234. 

Winters,  E.  H.— v.  6,  201. 

Wirtz,  Dr.  H.  R. — v,  1,  medical  director  for  Ariz.,  statement  con- 
cerning killing  of  Williams  and  Dr.  Kent  105,  v.  8,  120. 

Wiss,  Jno.  H.— V.  6,  88. 

Wolfskin,  Wm. — v.  1,  estab.  old  Spanish  trail  99. 

Wollaston,  Jno. — v.  1,  wounded  by  Indians  276. 

Wood,  Miles  L. — v,  8,  testities  in  behalf  of  Indians  massacred  at 
Camp  Grant  243. 

Wood,  Surgeon  Wm.  Maxwell — v.  1,  125. 

Woodcock,   C.   P.— V.  6,  89. 

Woodhouse,  Dr.  S.  W. — v.  1,  member  Sitgreaves'  party  264. 

Woods — V.  1,  member  exped.  from  Tucson  to  join  Crabb  in 
xMex.   331. 

Woods,  Isaiah  C. — v.  2,  supt.  and  mgr.  1st  stage  line  across  Ariz.  2. 

Woods,  Jos. — V.  6,  member  Swilling  party  72. 

Woodworth — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Woolsey,  King  S. — v.  2,  gives  Wickenburg  information  leading 
to  disc,  of  Vulture  mine  212,  bio.  215,  leads  party  against 
Apache  221,  with  Smith  and  Stearns  erects  Phoenix  flour  mill 
224,  V.  3,  writes  Carleton  about  gold  discoveries  in  Ariz.  14, 
29,  member  1st  Leg.  89,  his  activities  against  Indians  in 
Poston  speech  in  Congress  159,  appointed  Col.  of  militia  by 
Goodwin  189,  official  report  1st  exped.  against  Apache,  ap- 
pointed aide  on  Gov.'s  staff  258,  report  of  2d  exped.  against 
Apache  273,  1st  Leg.  thanks  for  services  277,  278,  contempt 
for  the  military  278,  v.  4,  with  A.  H.  Peeples  organizes  party 
to  follow  thieving  Indians  46,  55,  member  2d  Leg.  149,  in- 
corporator in  Atlantic  and  Pacific  Ry.  199,  with  Geo.  Martin 
purchases  Agua  Caliente  ranch  277,  v.  6,  183,  v.  7,  227,  v.  8, 
acct.  of  McCleave's  scout  against  Indians  24,  Mex.  boy  in  his 
service   killed  by  Mex.  outlaw  204. 

Woolsey  Ranch — v.  4,  settlement  272. 

Wooster  and  wife — v.  2,  killing  by  Apaches  271,  v.  8,  164, 

Worden,  Thos.  C— v.  6,  97. 

W^ordsworth,  W.  C. — v.  1,  Maj.  Gen.  of  Ariz.,  provisional  govt. 
326. 

Wormser,  Michael — v.  3,  erects  1st  building  on  plaza  at  Prescott 
213,  V.  6,  early  resident  Salt  River  valley  152,  198,  199. 

W'ormser  &  Co. — v.  4,  early  merchants  in  Prescott  260. 

Wormser  &  Wertheimer — v.  6,  early  merchants  of  Phoenix  198, 
199.  246. 

Wright.  A.  S. — v.  1,  organizer  in  Arizona  Mining  &  Trading  co. 
278. 

Wright,  Jno.  T. — v.  2,  member  California  Column,  scalps  Mangas 

Coloradas  148. 
Wright,   Gen.  W.  W. — v.  3,   146,  v.  4,  in  command  at  mouth  of 
San  Pedro  126,  v.  5,  in  charge  of  surv.  exped.  of  Kansas  & 
^    Pacific  Ry.  100.  v.  7,  tradition  of  Papago  311. 
Wrightson,  Wm. — v.  3,  mining  man  233,  234,  v.  4,  killed  by  Indians 

130.  V.  8,  135. 
Wyckoff— V.  8.  killed  by  Indians   147. 

Y 

Yancy.  Joe — v.   1,  member  Arizona  Mining  &  Trading  co.'s  ex- 
ploring  party  278. 
Yates,  Chas. — v.  4,  settles  in  Verde  valley  224. 

63 


Yavapai — v.  4,  friendly  to  whites  21,  gathered  by  Genung  on 
Colorado  river  res.  315,  v.  5,  McCormick  declares  hostile  2, 
threaten  La  Paz  308,  see  also  Apache-Mohave. 

Yavapai  County — v.  3,  estab.  by  1st  Leg,  93,  v.  4,  desc.  15,  mines 
and  ores  17. 

Yavapai  Mining  District — v.  2,  formation  307. 

Yerkes — v.  8,  train  attacked  by  Indians  145. 

Yerkes,  Edwin  A. — v.  6,  98. 

Yerkes,  Thos.  M.— v.  3,  80,  v.  5,  318. 

Yesera,  Manuel — v.  3,  opened   1st  store  in  Prescott  196. 

Ynigo — V.  8,  killed  by  Indians  141. 

Ynigo,  Manuel — v.  8,  train  attacked  by  Indians   M5. 

Yonker,  Edwd. — v.  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Yost — V.  1,  Indian  agt.  conducts  campaign  against  Navajo  312. 

Youmans,  Charley — v.  2,  pony  rider  and  mail  carrier  2. 

Young — V,  8,  killed  by  Indians  142. 

Young,  Brigham — v.  2,  directs  Jacob  Hamblin  to  explore  in 
Ariz.  24. 

Young,  Clement — v.  1,  member  Boundary  Commission  Survey 
184. 

Young,  Ewing — v.  1,  107. 

Young,  Jas.  A. — v.  6,  90,  98,  justice  of  peace  133. 

Young,  Jno. — v.  2,  member  Walker  party  243. 

Young,  Jno.  A. — v,  6,  98,  justice  of  peace  123. 

Young,  Col.  J.  Roe — v.  8,  Indian  agt.  at  Sacaton  11. 

Yuma — V.  1,  other  names  252,  survey  319,  352,  desc.  319,  dispute 
between  Cal.  and  Ariz,  over  321,  v.  3,  desc.  251,  252,  v.  4, 
dispute  with  Cal.  over  ownership  of  town  203,  desc.  by 
Rusling  251,  252,  vigilance  com.  formed  254,  Catholic  church 
built  298. 

Yuma  Indians — v.  1,  visited  by  Padre  Kino  60,  Padre  Garces 
estab.  missions,  revolt  72,  Webb's  experience  237,  desc.  by 
Whipple  253,  on  war-path  against  Maricopa  262,  conflicts 
with  Maricopa  27,  with  Apache-Mohave  attack  Pima  and 
Maricopa  29,  v.  7,  conquest  by  Heintzelman,  friendly  to 
whites  2,  hist.  232,  233,  v.  8,  res.  4. 

Yuma  Copper  Company — See  Harcuvar  copper  mines. 

Yuma  County — v.  3,  estab.  by  1st  Leg.  93,  v.  4,  desc.  of  in  1865  8. 

Yuma  Fort — See  Fort  Yuma. 

Yuma  Mining  District — v.  4,  9. 

Z 

Zulick,  Gov.  C.   Meyer — v.  5,  350. 

Zuni  River — v.  1,  Sitgreaves  makes  reconnaissance  down  264. 
Zuni  Villages — v.  1,  13,  visited  by  Espejo  28,  by  Onate  43,  48. 
Zuniga,  Don  Ignacio — v.  1,  desc.  affairs  Pimeria  Alta  78. 


64 


Errata  in  Original  Indexes 


Page 

V.  1. — Christobermo  should  be  Christostomo ^    76 

Basconzales   did  not   enter  Arizona   in   1526, 

should  be  1726 6 

Guaymas  should  be  Isabel 198 

"The  major"  should  be  "the  greater" 198 

V.  2. — McCormick  defeated  by  Hiram  Stevens,  error, 

McCormick  not  a  candidate 198 

V.  4.— Krautz  should  be  Kautz 260 

V.  5. — Ash  Fork  should  be  Prescott  Junction 349 

V.  6. — Balzan  should  be  Balzau 109 

Barrando  should  be  Barado 291 

V.  7. — Aravaipa    name    translation    error,    should   be 

"Small    Springs" 5 


I'M- 


FBI/ 


